A Pregnant Wife Found A Baby Shower Charge And A Condo Trap At Home-hothiyenvy_5

The transfer alert came through at 11:43 p.m., while rain blurred the windows of our Chicago apartment and made the streetlights look glossy and secretive.

I was seven months pregnant, sitting alone at the kitchen table with my ankles propped on a chair and a cup of chamomile tea going cold beside my elbow.

The apartment smelled like lemon dish soap, damp pavement, and the peppermint gum Ethan always chewed when he came home late.

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My phone buzzed once.

Transfer completed: $2,150.

For one small, foolish second, I thought my husband had finally sent the money for our daughter’s crib.

For weeks, Ethan had told me business was slow.

He said clients were delayed.

He said I was letting pregnancy anxiety turn normal baby expenses into panic.

He had watched me stand in discount stores comparing crib prices, then sighed like I was the irresponsible one for wanting the safer model before our daughter arrived.

“Our daughter won’t care if the crib is fancy,” he had said.

Then I read the payment note.

For Ashley’s baby shower and our little boy. Love you.

Ashley.

Our little boy.

Love you.

My daughter kicked beneath my ribs, a sharp little movement that made me put both hands over my stomach.

I did not scream.

I did not throw my phone.

I did not call Ethan and hand him my heartbreak so he could turn it into an accusation.

I took screenshots.

My mother used to tell me that a wounded woman may cry, but a smart woman collects evidence first.

She said it after my father died, when relatives suddenly remembered promises he had never made.

My father had bought the condo before he passed, and he had made sure it was in my name only.

He told me once that a woman should always have one door in the world that no one else can lock.

I married Ethan two years later.

Back then, he helped me carry boxes into that condo.

He brought pizza on paper plates, got the couch stuck in the hallway, and kissed me in the kitchen like being trusted by me was something sacred.

That memory came back at 11:43 p.m. with the cruelty of a receipt.

So I saved the alert.

I downloaded the notification.

I emailed copies to myself.

I copied the credit card statement into a password-protected folder and wrote the timestamp in a note on my phone.

11:43 p.m.

$2,150.

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