Jeremy clung to me that night, his arms wrapped around me so tightly I could barely breathe. He was like a scared puppy, whimpering, rambling apologies and promises into my hair.
"I'll go with you to your prenatal check-up tomorrow, Chelsey," he whispered, his voice thick with sleep and regret. "I promise. No more mistakes. Ever. I can't wait for this baby. Our baby."
He held me, trembling, until morning.
I woke to an empty bed. A single, cold note lay on his pillow: "Urgent company matter. Had to leave. See you tonight. Love, Jeremy."
My finger twitched. I knew. I just knew.
I scrolled through my feed. Donnie Decker. A new post, just minutes old. Her face, tear-streaked but defiant, was framed by the chaos of a public altercation. In the background, unmistakable, was Jeremy, mid-punch, his face a mask of primal fury. The caption read: "My hero. Always there to save me, no matter what."
He was playing the hero again. For her. While I lay in our bed, pregnant, waiting for him.
I laughed. A dry, humorless sound. Then, I got dressed. Alone. I drove myself to the hospital. Alone.
The nurse, kind and gentle, prepped me. The anesthetic spread through my spine, a cold, numbing wave. I felt a part of me, a tiny, nascent life, slip away. A single tear traced a path down my temple, a silent testament to love, to hate, to everything lost. But mostly, it was relief. A vast, overwhelming sense of release. I was finally free. Whatever Jeremy did, wherever he went, it no longer mattered. I no longer cared.
I dragged my exhausted body home late that night, the city lights blurring through the rain-streaked windows of the taxi. I just wanted to fall into bed and forget everything.
I unlocked the front door. The living room light was on. And there she was. Donnie. Sitting on my sofa, wearing my fluffy house slippers. My favorite tea cup, the one Jeremy had given me for our first anniversary, sat on the coffee table, a half-empty mug of herbal tea beside it.
The air in the room was thick, suffocating. Jeremy, who was standing awkwardly by the fireplace, stammered, "Chelsey, baby, it's not what it looks like. I swear."
He gestured vaguely at Donnie, who suddenly looked small and timid. "I... I finished up at the office, and I just happened to run into her. She was so upset. I just... I felt sorry for her. Her flight was canceled. I just let her stay for one night."
Donnie sprang up, her eyes wide with feigned innocence. "Oh, Chelsey, I'm so, so sorry! I really didn't mean to intrude. It's all my fault. Jeremy was just trying to be kind." She lowered her gaze, wringing her hands, but her eyes, when they briefly flickered to mine, held a glint of triumph, a defiant spark.
I didn't even look at her. My gaze remained fixed on Jeremy, my face a mask of utter indifference.
"It doesn't matter, Jeremy," I said, my voice eerily calm. "Who you bring home, who you sleep with, it has nothing to do with me anymore."
My eyes moved to the coffee table. The divorce papers, still where I had left them that morning, lay untouched.
"I came back for one reason only," I continued, reaching for the documents. I picked them up, then slammed them down on the table, the sharp thwack echoing in the silent room.
I looked Jeremy dead in the eye. "I had the abortion today. The baby is gone."
"Sign the papers, Jeremy."
The living room fell into a deathly silence. Jeremy' s face, which had been a ghastly pale already, drained of every last speck of color. He stared at me, his eyes wide and unblinking, as if I had spoken in a foreign language he couldn't comprehend.
Donnie, too, froze. Her hand flew to her mouth, a stifled gasp escaping her lips. But in the brief second her eyes met mine, a flicker of undeniable glee, quickly masked, danced in their depths.
"What did you say?" Jeremy's voice was a ragged whisper, broken and raw. He stumbled forward, reaching for me, his hands outstretched. "The baby... where's the baby?"
I sidestepped him, my gaze resting calmly, deliberately, on the divorce papers. My voice was as flat as the tabletop.
"I said the baby is gone. I had an abortion." I looked at him again. "Sign the papers, Jeremy. And then you can inform me when you' re done."
I reached into my purse, pulled out the hospital discharge papers, and placed them gently on the coffee table beside the divorce agreement. The thin sheets of paper, stark white against the dark wood, were more potent than any scream, any accusation.
Jeremy stared at them, then back at me. His face contorted. "No! You're lying! You're trying to punish me! To get back at me!" His voice rose, growing louder, more frantic. His eyes were bloodshot, bulging. He looked like a cornered animal, desperate and dangerous.
"The baby was our hope, Chelsey! Our future! How could you do this?" he roared, his fists clenched.
I let out a short, sharp laugh. It was a harsh, grating sound that scraped against the silence.
"Our hope?" I repeated, my voice dripping with ice. "Our hope died the moment you chose to run after Donnie again, Jeremy. It died when you left me in that hospital, bleeding, three years ago. It died when you decided that her drama was more important than our child's life. There was no hope left for us, not with you."
I looked at him, my expression devoid of warmth. "That baby wasn't a hope, Jeremy. It would have been a cage. A chain binding me to you, to this endless cycle of betrayal and forgiveness. I'm free now. And you, Jeremy, you're free too."
My words, light and airy, seemed to physically strike him. He staggered, his big frame swaying.
Donnie, seeing her cue, burst into tears. "Oh, Chelsey, how could you be so cruel? Jeremy was so excited about the baby! He talked about it constantly!" she wailed, her voice thick with false sorrow. "He bought all those tiny shoes, remember, Jeremy?"
I didn't even glance at her. "Shut up, Donnie," I said, my voice soft but utterly devoid of mercy. My eyes were still fixed on Jeremy' s ashen face. "You have no place in this conversation. None at all."
I took a step closer to her, my voice dropping, though its iciness remained. "Or do you want me to make you leave? Right now?"
Donnie flinched, her carefully constructed facade crumbling. She looked at Jeremy, her eyes pleading, but he seemed not to notice her. He was staring at me, his face a mask of torment.
With a heart-wrenching sob, Jeremy collapsed to the floor again, grabbing my legs. He gripped them tightly, his head pressed against my knees. "Chelsey, please! I'm so sorry! I beg you! Forgive me! Hit me, scream at me, kill me, just don't leave me! Don't abandon me!" His body shook with desperate sobs. "I can't live without you, Chelsey! I can't!"
He looked exactly as he had three years ago, a man brought to his knees, utterly undone. Back then, I might have felt a flicker of pity, a pang of my old love. Now, I felt nothing but a crushing weariness. It was grotesque, this pathetic display.
I slowly, deliberately, peeled his fingers from my legs. His nails, pressed hard against my skin, were white, like those of a drowning man clinging to a piece of driftwood.
"Stop it, Jeremy," I said, my voice an arctic chill, colder than any winter night. "Stop this act. Your tears disgust me."
"No! Chelsey, I love you! I only ever loved you!" he cried, scrambling to his feet. "I swear to God, I'll never see Donnie again! I'll block her, I'll delete her, I'll cut every single tie!"
I looked at him, truly looked at him. "Your pity, Jeremy," I said, each word a hammer blow, "does it extend to abandoning your pregnant wife in a hospital bed? Does your pity involve kissing another woman in the house you bought for her, on our anniversary? Your pity is expensive, Jeremy. It cost me a child. It cost me our marriage."
I paused, letting the words hang in the air. "Your actions, Jeremy, are always louder than your hollow promises. Every time you ran to her, it felt like you were plunging a knife into my heart. I've pulled the knife out now. And now, I'm leaving."
He slumped back onto the sofa, utterly defeated, his face ashen. I didn't look at him again. I walked past him, up the stairs, and began to pack.
I took only what was essential: my passport, a handful of old photos, my favorite books, and my most cherished personal items. The expensive clothes, the designer bags, the jewelry he had bought me-they were meaningless now. They were relics of a shattered illusion, silent mockery.
When I came back downstairs, Jeremy was still in the same position, staring blankly at nothing. Donnie, timidly, reached out to touch his arm. He recoiled, pushing her away with a low growl. "Don't touch me!"
My rolling suitcase made a crisp, echoing sound on the polished floors, stark and intrusive in the heavy silence. I paused at the door, the signed divorce papers clutched in my hand.
"Here," I said, placing them on the coffee table. "Sign them. Keep what you believe is yours. I only want what I'm legally entitled to. Nothing more. Nothing less."
I finally looked at Donnie, a cold, sardonic smile playing on my lips. "And as for you two," I said, my voice chillingly sweet, "I wish you both a long and happy life together. May you be shackled to each other forever. I' m done with your pathetic drama."
I pulled the door open. A gust of cold, wet night air rushed in, carrying with it the scent of rain and freedom. I felt lighter than I had in years, as if a thousand-pound weight had been lifted from my shoulders.
Just as I was about to step out, Jeremy lunged forward, grabbing me from behind, his arms tightening around my waist. "Chelsey, please! Don't go!" His voice was a desperate, choked cry. "I've deleted all her contacts! I swear! I've cut her out completely!"
I stood still, letting his desperate embrace envelop me for a moment. Then, my voice as steady as stone, I said, "Let go, Jeremy."
He tightened his grip. "No! I can't! I know if you walk out that door, you' ll never come back."
I took a deep breath, the cold air filling my lungs. "Whether you delete her or not, Jeremy, means nothing to me anymore. And frankly, seeing you like this, clinging to me, only solidifies my decision to leave. Don't make me lose the last shred of respect I have for you."
His arms slackened. Like a balloon releasing its last breath, his grip loosened. I pulled away effortlessly, then stepped out into the night.
I didn't look back. Behind me, I heard a strangled sob, raw and agonizing, echoing from the empty house.