He Abandoned His Pregnant Wife on a Highway, Then the Calls Began-ruby - Chainityai

He Abandoned His Pregnant Wife on a Highway, Then the Calls Began-ruby

The fog came in from the Pacific like it had been waiting for us.

It swallowed the road first, then the guardrail, then the headlights of the SUV I had bought for Dominic’s birthday three months earlier.

Inside the cabin, everything smelled like leather, rain, and the cold coffee he had left in the cup holder that morning.

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I remember that smell more clearly than I remember some of the words.

Maybe the body does that when it knows danger is coming.

It records the small things because the big thing is too much.

Dominic drove with both hands locked around the steering wheel.

His knuckles were pale in the dashboard light.

His wedding ring kept flashing every time we passed one of the white reflectors along the curve.

I sat beside him with one hand over my eight-month pregnant belly and the other wrapped around the strap of my bag.

The baby had been restless all evening.

A low ache had been pulling across my back since dessert, and every few minutes, a tightness moved through my body that made me stop breathing until it passed.

Dominic noticed none of it.

Or he noticed and chose not to care.

That was something I had been learning slowly.

The person who sleeps beside you can know exactly where you hurt and still press there when it helps him win.

We had just left dinner with two members of my board and my operations manager, Ashley.

It was supposed to be quiet.

A check-in before maternity leave.

A polite meal in a coastal restaurant with white tablecloths, halibut, mineral water, and men who never said the word problem until a woman had already solved it.

Dominic had come because he liked being seen beside the company when the company looked successful.

He liked shaking hands.

He liked saying we when he meant my.

He liked telling people we built something from nothing, though what he had mostly built was a habit of arriving after the work was done.

For six years, I let him have that.

I let him sit beside me at donor dinners.

I let him introduce himself as part of the leadership team.

I let him use the company card for client lunches that were never with clients.

I told myself marriage was not a courtroom and every expense did not need to be cross-examined.

Then my bookkeeper emailed me at 6:41 p.m. on Tuesday.

The subject line was simple.

Transfer Review Needed.

Three payments had left the business account over nine days.

The memo line said consulting reimbursement.

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