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He Threw Me Out in Labor, Then Returned With His Mistress—Who Turned White When She Recognized Her CEO
He Threw Me Out in Labor, Then Returned With His Mistress—Who Turned White When She Recognized Her CEO
The first contraction hit me while I was standing in the kitchen, one hand on the counter and the other on the curve of my stomach, trying to remember whether I had already texted the hospital bag checklist to myself or just thought about doing it.
At first, I told myself it was probably Braxton Hicks. My doctor had warned me I would feel false alarms for days, maybe weeks. I was thirty-eight weeks pregnant, exhausted, swollen, and emotional enough to cry over a commercial about golden retrievers. My body had been practicing for labor so often that I had stopped reacting every time the pain tightened across my lower back.
But this one was different.
It didn’t come and go like a rehearsal. It gripped. It dropped through my spine and wrapped around my middle with such force that I had to bow my head and breathe through my nose to keep from gasping. A ceramic mug sat beside the sink, half-full of cold chamomile tea. The kitchen window over the sink looked out on our narrow backyard in Naperville, Illinois, where the early evening sky had turned the color of wet slate.
I stood perfectly still until the pain eased.
Then I looked toward the living room.
My husband, Derek Lawson, was on the couch with his laptop open, the blue light from the screen hard against his face. He had been distant for weeks, but that night there was something different about him too—something restless and already gone. His jaw had been clenched since he came home. He barely touched dinner. He had checked his phone so many times I stopped pretending not to notice.
I pressed a hand to my stomach and called softly, “Derek?”
He didn’t look up. “What?”
“I think…” Another wave of pain rolled through me, sharper than the first. “I think it might be time.”
That got his attention. He looked over, but not with concern. More like irritation, like I had interrupted an important email.
“What do you mean, time?”
“I’m having contractions.”
He stared at me for a second too long. “Real ones?”
“I don’t know yet.” I tried to smile, though the room had suddenly started to tilt in that strange way pain can make it tilt. “Maybe. Can you grab my phone? I want to start timing them.”
He shut his laptop with a snap. “You’ve got to be kidding me.”
I blinked. “What?”
“I had a terrible day, Harper.”
For a second, I honestly thought I had misunderstood him. Pain does that too. It scrambles logic. It makes ordinary things sound unreal.
“I know,” I said carefully. “But I think I’m in labor.”
He stood, and instead of coming toward me, he began pacing in front of the coffee table. “Of course. Of course this happens tonight.”
The third contraction took my breath so completely I couldn’t answer right away. I gripped the edge of the counter until my knuckles went white. When it passed, I said, “Can you please just get my phone?”
He ran a hand through his hair and laughed once, but there was no humor in it.
“You know what?” he said. “I’m done.”
I stared at him.
“What?”
“I’m done supporting someone with no job.” His voice had turned cold in that deliberate way that meant he had been rehearsing. “Get out.”
For a heartbeat, the whole house went silent except for the hum of the refrigerator.
I actually looked behind me, like maybe he was talking to someone else.
“Derek,” I said, and I heard my own voice cracking now, “I’m in labor.”
He picked up his car keys from the side table. “Then call someone.”
I took one step toward him, then stopped because the floor beneath me seemed to ripple.
“Are you serious?”
He looked me directly in the eyes, and that was the worst part. Not the words. The certainty.
“I can’t do this anymore, Harper. I’ve carried this marriage for over a year while you drifted around with no paycheck, no plan, and no clue what real life costs. I’m not spending another night playing nurse to somebody who contributes nothing.”
I felt the baby shift low and hard inside me.
Something primal rose in me then—not just fear, but disbelief so strong it felt like nausea.
“I left my job because my doctor told me to,” I said. “Because I was put on restricted activity. Because your daughter is due any day.”
“Our daughter,” he snapped, as though I had insulted him, “which I’ve been paying for alone.”
The irony of that sentence nearly split me open.
Not because he was paying our bills. He was. Mostly. But because he had no idea—not the faintest idea—that two weeks earlier I had inherited ten million dollars from my grandfather, along with a controlling interest in Monroe Capital Holdings, the Chicago private investment firm my family had built over three generations.
I had not told him yet.
Not because I was trying to deceive him for sport. Not because I was testing him. But because my grandfather’s will had been tied up in final probate documents and board conditions, and my attorney had made it clear the news had to remain confidential until the transfer was officially completed. There were tax filings, succession votes, public notices, press embargoes. It was not the sort of thing you blurted out over pasta on a random Tuesday.
And if I was being painfully honest with myself, there was another reason.
I had wanted one more little stretch of time to think before Derek knew.
Because the man I married at twenty-nine was not the man pacing in front of me now, throwing me out while our child pressed toward the world.
The Derek I married was funny and bright and charming with everyone. He remembered birthdays. He knew how I liked my coffee. He kissed my forehead when I got migraines. He talked about building a family like it was a sacred thing.
That Derek had slowly disappeared somewhere in my third trimester.
Maybe earlier.
Maybe the signs had always been there and I had sanded them down because love makes people interpreters of cruelty long before they become its victims.
“What are you saying?” I asked him. “That you want a divorce? Right now? While I’m in labor?”
“I’m saying I’m done,” he said. “You need to leave.”
I laughed then—a sharp, stunned sound that hurt my throat.
“You want me to leave this house tonight?”
He lifted one shoulder. “It’s in my name.”
The pain came again, stronger than before. I bent over, both hands on the counter now, and tried to breathe.
Derek stood there and watched me.
He did not move.
He did not ask if I was okay.
He did not come near me.
When the contraction passed, I looked up at him and saw something I had never quite let myself name before.
Contempt.
Not anger. Not even impatience.
Contempt.
He thought I was weak. Useless. Burdensome. Something expensive and emotional that had stopped being fun.
I straightened with effort and said, “If you walk out that door right now, don’t come back pretending this was a misunderstanding.”
He smiled, but it was thin and mean.
“You don’t get to give ultimatums from my kitchen.”
Then he walked out.
I heard the front door slam.
A moment later, his car engine started.
Then he was gone.
For several seconds, I could not move.
It was the silence after abandonment that broke me more than the abandonment itself. That instant where the house still looked the same—the beige walls, the half-folded baby blanket on the dining room chair, the diaper box by the stairs—and yet nothing in it belonged to the life I thought I had.
Then the next contraction hit, and reality came roaring back.
I grabbed my phone from the kitchen island where I had left it charging and fumbled so badly I almost dropped it twice. My fingers were shaking. My vision blurred. I dialed my doctor’s after-hours line and got the service immediately. They told me what I already knew by the spacing and intensity.
Go to the hospital.
Now.
When I hung up, I stared at the screen for Derek’s name.
Then I locked the phone without calling him.
Not because I was brave. Because something in me had gone cold.
I called my neighbor instead.
Marlene Peterson lived three houses down. She was in her sixties, wore Cardinals sweatshirts year-round, and had the sort of practical kindness that made you feel steadier just by standing near her. She answered on the second ring.
“Harper?”
“Marlene,” I whispered, because another contraction was already building, “I need help.”
She was at my house in under four minutes.
When she walked in and saw my face, she didn’t waste time asking questions that didn’t matter.
“Hospital?”
I nodded.
“Bag?”
“By the stairs.”
She picked it up with one hand, tucked my phone into the side pocket, and wrapped the other arm around me. “Come on, honey.”
“I—” My voice broke. “He left.”
Marlene’s mouth tightened, but she said only, “Then we’ll remember that later. Right now we’re having a baby.”
I remember the drive in flashes.
Streetlights streaking past the car windows.
Marlene muttering, “Breathe, sweetheart, breathe.”
My hands clenched in the seat belt.
The smell of rain on the windshield.
The hospital entrance glowing like a ship in a storm.
At the labor and delivery desk, I finally cried.
Not the dramatic movie kind. Not loud. Just tears running sideways down my face while a nurse in navy scrubs knelt beside the wheelchair and asked gentle questions in a practiced voice.
“How far apart are the contractions?”
“First baby?”
“Anyone joining you tonight?”
That last one lodged somewhere under my ribs.
I swallowed. “No.”
The nurse’s expression changed in the smallest possible way—professional, but warmer.
“Okay,” she said softly. “Then we’ve got you.”
Her name was Natalie. I still remember because she wrote it on the whiteboard in my room in purple marker and underlined it like a promise. The room itself was brighter than I expected. Machines blinked quietly. The bed was larger than the one in the movies. A monitor wrapped around m