He Left His Pregnant Wife For A Sale, Then Saw Her Black Card-heuh

In labour with twins, I begged my husband to take me to the hospital when my mother-in-law blocked the door, barking, “He’s taking us to the shopping centre first!” Travis locked the door, snarled, “Don’t move until I’m back,” and drove off.

Luckily, my friend arrived in time to take me to the hospital and booked me a private £12,000 suite.

Two hours later, my husband stormed in, grabbed my hair, and shouted, “How dare you waste my money!”

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Just as he was about to punch me in the stomach, the alarms blared.

“THE SHOPPING CENTRE COMES BEFORE YOUR LABOUR, ELARA. GET IN THE CAR OR GET ON THE FLOOR.”

Martha’s voice cracked through the narrow hallway with the clean, polished cruelty of someone who had never once been told no.

I was on the floor by the front door, one hand gripping the radiator pipe and the other pressed beneath the impossible weight of my stomach.

The rain outside had turned the front step dark, and every breath I took tasted of cold metal, old carpet, and the tea I had not managed to drink.

I was thirty-eight weeks pregnant with twins.

Every midwife, every note, every appointment had said the same thing in neat, serious language: high risk, urgent attention, do not delay.

But Martha Thorne did not care for urgent attention unless it involved a discount rail.

She stood above me in a stiff coat, handbag tucked beneath her arm, gold watch flashing as she checked the time.

I knew that watch.

I had bought it for her birthday with money I had pretended was from Travis, because I had still believed kindness could make a home out of that house.

“Martha,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady. “They’re three minutes apart. I need the hospital.”

She breathed out through her nose, almost amused.

“Sienna needs a winter coat,” she said. “The sale starts at ten. Your timing, as usual, is selfish.”

Another contraction tore through me so hard the hallway seemed to tilt.

I heard myself make a sound I would have been ashamed of on any other day.

On that day, shame had become a luxury.

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