I didn’t. Not yet.
But by evening, I did.
Her name was Lauren Mercer. Twenty-nine. Former pharmaceutical sales rep. Ethan had been paying the rent on a downtown apartment under an LLC I had assumed was tied to one of his suppliers. Rebecca’s investigator found the lease, the utility bills, and photos from social media that Lauren had kept mostly private—except for one tagged image from seven months earlier. Ethan’s hand rested on her pregnant belly.
The caption read: Building our little future.
Our little future.
While I covered mortgages, maxed retirement contributions, and missed holidays in the trauma bay, my husband had been building another family in parallel with mine. Not a fling. Not a mistake. A second life, carefully financed with time, lies, and my labor.
At 9:12 p.m., Ethan finally called.
“Flight got delayed,” he said casually. “I may land late.”
I looked at the phone, then at the investigator’s photo on my laptop. And I answered, “That’s strange, Ethan. Because France doesn’t usually deliver babies in Chicago.”
The silence on the line lasted three full seconds.
Then Ethan exhaled once, like a man realizing the stage lights had come on before he was ready. “Claire,” he said, voice low and urgent, “I can explain.”
“No,” I replied, standing in Rebecca’s conference room with the city lights burning outside the windows. “What you can do is listen.”
He started with the usual coward’s script. It was complicated. He never meant for me to find out like this. Lauren had gotten pregnant unexpectedly. He was going to tell me after he figured things out. He still cared about me. He didn’t want to lose me. Every sentence was an insult disguised as vulnerability. He wanted credit for being emotionally overwhelmed after constructing a double life for at least a year.
I let him talk until he ran out of excuses.