They Called Me A Pregnant Burden—Then Protocol 7 Started At Dinner-heuh

I never told my ex-husband or his billionaire family that I secretly owned the company where they all worked.

To them, I was the woman Brendan Morrison was trying to get rid of politely enough that no one could accuse him of cruelty.

I was the awkward chair left in the room after the party ended.

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I was the pregnant burden.

Diane Morrison said that phrase two weeks before the dinner, standing in the hallway outside her kitchen with a glass of white wine in one hand and her phone in the other.

She thought I was upstairs.

I was not.

I was in the laundry room, taking a clean towel out of the dryer because the guest bathroom never had enough, and I heard every word through the half-open door.

“She is a pregnant burden, Brendan,” Diane said. “You need this divorce finalized before she figures out how much damage she can do.”

I remember folding that towel very slowly.

The cotton was warm against my fingers.

The dryer smelled like lavender sheets and expensive detergent, and for a moment I stood there with one hand on my stomach, wondering how many women had stayed quiet in beautiful houses because the cruelty came wrapped in good china and soft voices.

Brendan did not defend me.

He made the tired sound he made whenever his mother said something he already agreed with but wanted to pretend was complicated.

“She won’t fight,” he said. “Cassidy hates conflict.”

That was the part that almost made me laugh.

I did hate conflict.

I hated yelling across rooms.

I hated public scenes.

I hated the way rich people could ruin a person’s life with a smile and a sentence that sounded polite enough to repeat in church.

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