And then, he said the words that shattered my heart.
“I… I made a mistake.”
The room went still.
“A mistake?” I repeated, slowly.
He nodded. “I’ve been seeing someone. From work.”
I felt like I had been punched in the chest. My brain couldn’t even begin to process the words.
And then came the next bombshell.
“She might be pregnant,” he said. “With twins.”
I sat frozen. My hands trembled.
The candles flickered. The wine soured in my mouth. Everything I thought I knew about my marriage dissolved at that moment.
Rage and heartbreak rose inside me like a tidal wave.
“You’ve been cheating on me, and she might be pregnant with your children? And you planned this whole evening like it was some romantic gesture?!”
Simon held his hands up. “I didn’t mean for it to happen. It was a mistake. I never wanted it to go this far.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
“You didn’t mean for this to happen?” I screamed. “You don’t accidentally cheat long enough for someone to possibly be carrying twins!”
He looked like he wanted to disappear. But then he looked back at me with something strange in his eyes.
“There’s more,” he said quietly.
I stared at him, breathless. “More?”
“I can’t hide who she is anymore.”
He picked up his phone. Dialed. “Come in,” he said softly.
I blinked. Confused. My heart pounded.
And then, I heard the door creak open behind me.
I turned.
And everything inside me shattered.
It was my sister.
I passed out.
When I regained consciousness, I was on the floor. My sister was kneeling beside me, fanning my face with a folded paper. Simon handed me a glass of water. My skin crawled at their touch.
Memories rushed back. Words. Confessions. The betrayal.
“You??” I gasped, locking eyes with her.
She looked down, ashamed.
“How could you both do this to me?” I screamed. “You’re my husband. And you’re my sister!”
My sister’s voice cracked. “We didn’t plan it… it just happened.”
My world spun. I couldn’t breathe.
I wish I could say I stood up, held my head high, and walked away. But I didn’t. I sat there, trembling. Hollow.
Eventually, I found the strength to speak.
“Get out,” I said, voice low.
They hesitated.
“GET OUT!” I screamed. “Both of you. NOW!”
They left in silence. The click of the door behind them felt like the end of everything.
That night, I sobbed into my pillow. I wish it were a nightmare. But morning came, and nothing had changed.
The betrayal was real.
My sister tried to call. My mother-in-law bombarded me with voicemails.
I ignored them all.
There was nothing left to say.
As I write this, I’m still drowning in grief; still asking myself how I missed the signs.
Two people I trusted more than anyone turned out to be the very ones to ruin me.
This story isn’t just about a broken marriage; it’s about what happens when your heart breaks at the hands of people you never thought would hurt you.
My trust is gone. My world’s in pieces. And I don’t know when, or if, I’ll feel whole again.
But if this is happening to you too. Please know that you’re not alone.
My Husband Left Me for Another Woman After Mocking My Looks During Pregnancy, but I Got the Last Laugh — Story of the Day
During my pregnancy, my husband changed. He mocked my looks, ignored my pain, and made me feel worthless. Then he left me for someone else, thinking he had won. But what he didn’t know was that I had a plan of my own. And when the time came, he never saw it coming.
Pregnancy — it’s supposed to be one of the most beautiful moments in a woman’s life. That is, of course, if you have a husband who loves and supports you every step of the way.
But in my case, my pregnancy came with morning sickness that seemed to never end. I was weak all the time, barely able to stay upright. On top of that, I had Arnie.
Arnie used to adore me. He used to carry me around in his arms like I was something precious. We had such a strong, loving relationship, or so I thought.
When we found out I was pregnant, he grinned ear to ear while holding the positive test in his hands. He kissed my forehead and promised to take care of us.
But everything changed the moment my body started changing.
At first, it was little things. Snide remarks. “You could at least dress better for your husband instead of walking around in pajamas all day,” he said once.
Never mind that I had spent the entire morning curled up on the bathroom floor, puking at the slightest smell.
Then the comments became complaints. “You just lie around all day,” he grumbled as he kicked off his shoes one evening. “This house is a mess.”
“I’m doing my best,” I said quietly. “My back is killing me, and I feel sick all the time. I can barely stand without getting dizzy.”
But it never mattered to him.
Soon, he was coming home later and later, glued to his phone, texting someone with a strange smile on his face. The way he would lock his screen the second I walked into the room made my stomach churn.
Every time I asked, he’d wave me off. “It’s just work,” he said.
One night, when I was eight months pregnant — my belly enormous, my ankles swollen, and even breathing felt like a workout — Arnie came home late again, this time reeking of women’s perfume.
“Where have you been?” I asked, my voice barely holding steady.
He didn’t even glance at me. “None of your business,” he muttered, tossing his keys on the table and heading for the kitchen.
“JESSICA!” he suddenly shouted, loud enough to shake the walls.
My heart jumped. I flinched, then pushed myself up off the couch, my back screaming in pain. I limped toward the kitchen, grabbing the wall for support.
“What is it?” I asked, already breathless.
He was standing at the fridge. “Where’s dinner?”
“I tried to cook,” I said. “But I felt so sick again. Every time I smell food, I have to run to the bathroom.”
He turned sharply. “Could you at least have washed the dishes?”
His voice got louder. “I come home exhausted, and this place is disgusting! No food. No clean plates. What do you even do all day?”
“I’m trying,” I whispered. “Arnie, I’m really trying.”
“You just sit around in your sweatpants,” he scoffed.
I placed a protective hand on my belly. “I’m carrying our daughter. My body is working around the clock—”
“Don’t start!” he snapped. “My sister was pregnant. She did everything. She cooked. She cleaned. She still looked good. And she never ignored her husband in bed!”
I gasped. His words hit me like a slap. “Pregnancy isn’t the same for everyone,” I said. “I never thought it would be this hard either. But I’m doing it for her. For us.”
“You’re just lazy!” he shouted before slamming the front door behind him.
I collapsed into a chair, covering my face as sobs wracked my body. Tears spilled from my eyes, and my shoulders shook with every breath. I didn’t know how we got here, how the man who once called me beautiful every morning now treated me like dirt.
That night, I didn’t sleep. I stared at the ceiling in the dark, my heart aching. I checked my phone again and again, until a message finally came through.
He’s here. He needed space.
His mother.
He wasn’t with another woman. Not this time, at least.
When he returned, things only got worse. His eyes held nothing but contempt. His voice was always sharp. “This place is always filthy.” “You just lie around.” “You don’t even try.”
Each word chipped away at me until I barely recognized myself.
I confided in my best friend. As I told her everything, her expression darkened.
“You need to leave him,” she said firmly.
“I can’t,” I said, my voice cracking. “I have no job. No savings. I’m pregnant. I have nowhere to go.”
“You have people who care about you, Jess. You’re not alone,” she said.
I wanted to believe her, but the fear had its claws in me.
Then one evening, Arnie took a shower. And for the first time in months, he left his phone unlocked on the counter.
My heart pounded as I picked it up.
I found a dating app and hundreds of messages. Flirting. Hookups. Pictures.
While I was home carrying his child, he was out with other women.
I dropped the phone and held my belly as if trying to shield my baby from the pain.
But I didn’t cry.
Instead,

