She Gave Birth to Triplet Boys, Then Ordered the Housemaid to Make the Darkest One Disappear Forever—But the Child She…
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The nursery still smelled of fresh paint and baby powder when my husband walked in with a suitcase. I was sitting on the floor, crib screws lined neatly beside me, one ankle swollen inside my slipper, trying to follow instructions that kept slipping out of focus. At forty-five and eight months pregnant, I was still in disbelief that my body had carried me this far again. Even standing up took planning—and a little faith. So when I saw Evan holding a suitcase, I assumed it was just another work trip. “Why do you have a suitcase?” I asked. He placed it quietly by the door. “I can’t do this anymore.” I let out a small laugh, because the alternative was panic. “Do what, exactly?” “The noise. The diapers. The chaos, Savannah.” His hand gestured toward my stomach. “And this.” For a moment, everything fell silent. I could hear the baby kick sharply, as if protesting. I stared at him. “That’s an interesting time to bring it up, considering she’s almost here—the baby you insisted we keep despite my age and the risks.” He exhaled impatiently. “I just want peace for once.” It wasn’t just that he was leaving—it was that he had already turned our life into something unbearable in his mind. Margot appeared in the doorway, holding a basket of folded laundry. “Mom?” she said, then looked at him. “Dad? Are you going somewhere?” I answered before he could. “Go check if George washed his hands, honey.” She hesitated. “Margot.” She swallowed. “Okay.” Evan picked up his suitcase. I didn’t shout. I stayed on the nursery floor, one hand resting on my belly, listening to him walk out of a room we had painted together just days earlier. When the front door shut, the baby kicked again. “I know,” I whispered. That night, I slept on the couch because the stairs were too much. Marcus couldn’t find his school folder. Phoebe cried over a broken toy. Elliot spilled milk. Mary quietly packed lunches without being asked. Margot brought me a blanket and pretended not to notice I hadn’t moved in a long time. Around midnight, she stood in the doorway wearing her father’s old sweatshirt. “Is Dad coming back?” she asked. “I think your father is confused,” I said gently. She held my gaze. “That’s not what I asked.” No… it wasn’t. Two days later, he appeared all over social media with Brielle—a young fitness influencer my daughters admired. She was twenty-three, glowing, disciplined, untouched by exhaustion. In her video, they stood by a rooftop pool. Evan smiled like he had escaped something, not abandoned a family. Mary glanced over my shoulder. “Is that Dad?” I locked the phone too late. “Yes.” She frowned. “Is that… Brielle?” I set the phone down. “He should be ashamed.”
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