The Night His Pregnant Wife Walked Into His Enemy’s Arms-hothiyenvy_5

The night Dylan Marchetti wished his pregnant wife would disappear, Leslie Hartwell Marchetti did not give him the kind of scene men like him prepare for.

She did not scream.

She did not slap him.

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She did not beg him to love her in front of the glass wall of his twenty-eighth-floor office while Chicago moved beneath them in lines of brake lights and copper-colored dusk.

She simply stood in front of his desk with one hand pressed to her stomach and said, “I’m pregnant.”

The pen in Dylan’s hand paused just long enough to prove he had heard her.

Then it kept moving.

“A child doesn’t change anything, Leslie,” he said, his voice low, smooth, almost tired. “Not between us. Not in my schedule.”

The room was cold from the central air.

The ink smelled sharp.

The office windows held the city like a silent witness that had seen too many powerful men say unforgivable things behind expensive glass.

Leslie looked at the document under his hand.

It was not a letter.

It was not a medical form.

It was not even something urgent enough to excuse the way he refused to look at the clinic envelope she had carried there like a fragile piece of her own body.

It was a board authorization page.

That was what he chose to finish while his wife told him their child existed.

For three seconds, Leslie heard nothing but the faint hum of the building and the small, awful sound of his pen crossing paper.

Then something inside her went still.

Not numb.

Clear.

Clarity is colder than heartbreak.

Heartbreak still hopes someone will turn around and say the right thing.

Clarity watches them choose not to.

“All right,” she whispered.

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