"I want my money back. Now." My voice cut through the tension in the maternity center lobby. The words came out stronger than I felt, my body trembling with rage and betrayal.
Maddox finally stood, releasing Piper's hand. "Emmie, you're making a scene. Let's talk about this at home."
"There's nothing to talk about!" I stepped toward the reception desk where Jennifer Walsh, the young receptionist, watched with wide eyes. "I need to speak to your manager. My husband fraudulently used our joint savings to purchase services here, and I'm demanding an immediate refund."
Jennifer nodded quickly. "I'll call the financial office right away, ma'am."
"You can't do that," Maddox hissed, grabbing my arm. "That money is for our baby."
I yanked my arm away. "Your baby? With her?" I gestured toward Piper, who cradled her belly protectively. "That was our house money, Maddox. Money I earned. Money we saved together for our future."
"A future you couldn't provide," Angie interjected, her voice dripping with venom. "Three years of marriage and not even a pregnancy to show for it."
Something inside me snapped. I turned back to Jennifer. "Please process the refund immediately. That money was taken without my consent."
"Don't you dare!" Maddox lunged forward, his face contorted with rage. I'd never seen him look so wild, so unlike the man I'd married.
"Sir, please calm down," Jennifer said, reaching for the phone.
"I said NO!" Maddox shoved me hard, his hands connecting with my shoulders. The force sent me stumbling backward. I tried to catch myself but my heel caught on the polished floor. Time slowed as I fell, my lower back slamming against the sharp marble edge of the reception desk.
Pain exploded through my body. I crumpled to the floor, a strange warmth spreading between my legs.
"Oh my God!" Jennifer's voice seemed far away. "Security! We need medical assistance now!"
The world tilted and spun. Through blurring vision, I saw Maddox standing frozen, Piper's hand over her mouth in shock, and Angie's face—not triumphant as I'd expected, but suddenly uncertain.
"She's bleeding," someone said.
I looked down. Red. So much red, seeping through my jeans.
The last thing I remembered was Jennifer kneeling beside me, her hand squeezing mine as she spoke urgently into a phone. "We need an ambulance. A woman has fallen and she's bleeding heavily."
---
Beeping machines pulled me back to consciousness. White walls. Antiseptic smell. Hospital.
"Ms. Barnes?" A gentle voice drew my attention. A woman in a white coat stood beside my bed, her face kind but serious. The name tag read Dr. Sarah Mitchell. "How are you feeling?"
"What happened?" My voice came out raspy, my throat dry.
Dr. Mitchell sat on the edge of my bed, her clipboard clutched against her chest. "You suffered a fall at the Beverly Hills Maternity Center. You hit your back on the reception desk and lost consciousness."
Memories flooded back—Maddox's hands on my shoulders, the force of his push, the sharp pain as I hit the desk.
"There's something else, Ms. Barnes." Dr. Mitchell's voice softened. "Your blood work showed elevated hCG levels. You were in the early stages of pregnancy, approximately six weeks along."
The world stopped. "Were?"
She nodded, her eyes filled with compassion. "I'm very sorry, but the trauma from your fall resulted in a miscarriage. We had to perform an emergency D&C procedure while you were unconscious."
I was pregnant. I had been carrying our child. The child Maddox claimed I couldn't give him.
"Does my husband know?" I whispered.
"Yes. He's in the waiting room with his mother and another woman."
As if summoned by our conversation, the door swung open. Maddox strode in, his face a mask of irritation rather than concern.
"Finally, you're awake," he said, keeping his distance from the bed. "Do you have any idea what you've done? You completely humiliated me in front of everyone."
Dr. Mitchell stiffened beside me. "Mr. Harvey, your wife has just received traumatic news. She needs support, not accusations."
"Traumatic news?" He scoffed. "She's the one who barged in making wild accusations and demands. If she hadn't caused such a scene—"
"I was pregnant," I said, my voice hollow. "I was carrying your child, and now it's gone."
He faltered for just a moment before his face hardened again. "Convenient timing, isn't it? Suddenly you're claiming pregnancy right when you discover Piper and me?"
Before I could respond, the door opened again. Piper entered, one hand on her belly, with Angie hovering protectively beside her.
"Is she still here?" Piper's voice trembled perfectly, her eyes wide with fear. "Doctor, I don't feel safe with her around. She tried to attack me at the center. She could have hurt my baby!"
"That's not true!" I struggled to sit up, wincing at the pain.
"It's exactly what happened," Angie insisted, turning to Dr. Mitchell. "This woman became violent when she saw my son with his girlfriend. She lunged at Piper, and Maddox only intervened to protect his real child."
"His real child?" I echoed, the words like acid on my tongue.
"Yes," Angie said coldly. "Not some convenient story about a pregnancy that nobody witnessed. We need to keep her away from our family. From our future grandchild."
I looked between them—my husband who had pushed me, causing me to lose our baby; his mistress playing the victim; his mother spinning lies to protect them both. Three faces united against me, rewriting reality to make me the villain of their story.
I stared at my phone screen, the Uber app showing I was just five minutes from home. Home. The word felt hollow now, like a promise broken beyond repair. My body ached from the hospital bed, but the physical pain was nothing compared to the gaping wound in my chest.
The miscarriage. My baby. Our baby that Maddox never even knew existed before it was gone.
The Uber driver glanced at me in the rearview mirror. "You okay, miss? You're very pale."
"I'm fine," I lied, watching familiar streets blur past. I just needed to get home, crawl into bed, and figure out what came next.
As we turned onto my street, I frowned. Something was wrong. There appeared to be... furniture on our front lawn?
"Stop here," I said, my voice tight. The driver pulled over, and I stumbled out, staring in disbelief.
My clothes. My books. Photo albums, shoes, even my grandmother's quilt—all strewn across the lawn like garbage. Some neighbors had stopped to stare, whispering behind their hands.
I ran to the front door, fumbling for my keys, but they wouldn't turn in the lock. I tried again, then again, panic rising in my throat.
"Maddox!" I pounded on the door. "What is this? Open the door!"
After a moment, his voice came through, cold and distant. "You need to find somewhere else to stay, Emmie."
"What? This is my house too! You can't just—"
"Piper needs a safe space for our baby," he cut me off. "After your violent outburst at the center, we don't feel comfortable with you here."
I pressed my forehead against the door, tears streaming down my face. "Violent outburst? You pushed me! I lost our baby because of you!"
Silence. Then: "There was no baby, Emmie. Just another manipulation. You've proven yourself unstable and dangerous. I've changed the locks for our protection."
Our protection. As if I were the threat. As if I hadn't been the one bleeding on a hospital floor hours earlier.
"My clothes, my things—" I choked out.
"Everything of yours is on the lawn. Take it and go."
I stood there, trembling, as a neighbor walking her dog crossed to the other side of the street to avoid me. The woman who'd lost her mind. The woman whose husband had thrown her out.
---
The Lakeside Motel smelled of bleach and cigarettes. I sat on the edge of the sagging bed, staring at the water stain on the ceiling that vaguely resembled Australia. Forty-eight dollars a night had bought me this room and the pitying glance of the clerk who'd helped me carry in the few belongings I'd managed to salvage from the lawn.
My phone buzzed with a notification. Habit made me check it, though I should have known better.
Instagram. Piper Cruz had posted a new photo. The algorithm knew we were connected through Maddox and helpfully suggested I might want to see it.
My breath caught. It was our bedroom—my bedroom. The one I'd decorated with the pale blue walls and white curtains. Piper lounged on my side of the bed, wrapped in my silk robe, the one Maddox had given me for our second anniversary.
"Home sweet home with my loves ❤️ #NewBeginnings #BlessedFamily" the caption read. She'd tagged Maddox and even Angie.
I scrolled through her feed, my hands shaking. There she was in my kitchen, drinking from my favorite mug. Another showed her arranging flowers in the vase my sister had given me for Christmas.
She hadn't just taken my husband. She'd taken my life, slipped into it like trying on a new dress, and was flaunting it for the world to see.
---
"I'm very sorry, Mrs. Harvey, but there's nothing we can do." The bank manager—Roger, according to his nameplate—looked genuinely sympathetic as he closed my account file on his computer screen.
"It's Ms. Barnes," I corrected him automatically. "And there must be something. That money was mostly from my salary. I have pay stubs to prove it."
Roger sighed, removing his glasses to rub the bridge of his nose. "The nature of a joint account is that both parties have equal access and ownership of the funds. Without proof of fraud or coercion..."
"He stole it to pay for his pregnant mistress!" My voice rose, drawing stares from other customers.
"I understand this is distressing," Roger lowered his voice, "but legally, he had every right to withdraw those funds. The account agreement you both signed gives either of you full access without requiring the other's consent."
I stared at him, the reality sinking in. One hundred and ninety thousand dollars. Gone. Three years of sacrifices, of brown-bag lunches and no vacations, of saying no to every small luxury. All of it taken in an instant to pay for another woman's comfort.
"So he gets away with it," I whispered. "He gets everything—the house, the money, his new family—and I get nothing."
Roger couldn't meet my eyes. "I wish I had better news, Ms. Barnes. I truly do."
I walked out of the bank into the bright afternoon sunlight, feeling like a ghost. In the span of twenty-four hours, I had lost my husband, my home, my savings, and a baby I hadn't even known existed until it was gone.
I had nothing left to lose.