A shocking story of betrayal, deception, and sweet revenge. A pregnant woman abandoned by her husband gets a chilling offer—but turns the tables on him and his mistress in the most powerful way.
I was heavily pregnant with twins when my world collapsed.
I was folding tiny onesies, daydreaming about baby names, when my phone buzzed.
My heart raced when I saw it was a message from my husband’s boss, Vivian. I instantly feared something had happened to Eddie at work—but the truth was far worse.
I opened the message, expecting bad news. Instead, I saw a photo of Eddie, shirtless, lying in a strange bed, smirking at the camera.
If I had any doubts, the caption made things clear: “It’s time you knew. He’s mine.”
My hands went cold. The babies kicked inside me, like they could sense my shock. Eddie was cheating on me—with his boss.
I called him right away, but it went straight to voicemail. Again and again, nothing.
By then, it felt like the twins were using my bladder as a trampoline. I lowered myself slowly onto the sofa, hand on my belly.
“Easy, babies,” I whispered. “Mama’s got you. No matter what happens, I’ll protect you. I know Daddy… Eddie won’t abandon you, even if he’s betrayed me.”
I couldn’t have been more wrong.
When Eddie came home that night, he wasn’t alone.
Vivian waltzed in like she owned the place. Tall, polished, dressed in clothes that probably cost more than our rent. The kind of woman who takes up space without trying.
“Eddie… what is this?” I asked, standing my ground though I barely felt strong enough to stay upright.
Eddie sighed. “It’s simple, Laura. I’m in love with Vivian, so I’m leaving you. Let’s be mature about this, okay?”
Each word landed like a punch.
“You can’t be serious,” I whispered. “We’re having babies. In two months.”
“Life happens,” he shrugged—shrugged! Like he was canceling a dinner reservation, not walking out on his pregnant wife.
Then Vivian crossed her arms, nails gleaming under the light.
“And since this is Eddie’s apartment, you’ll need to move out by the end of the week.”
I blinked. “Are you both insane? I have nowhere to go. I’m carrying his children!”
“Twins, right?” Vivian tilted her head, examining my belly like I was livestock. “Or is it triplets? You’re rather… swollen. But I may have a solution.”
Her lips curled into something resembling a smile. “I’ll buy you a house and cover your expenses. In return, I want one of the babies.”
My blood ran cold. “What?!”
“I want a baby, but I’m not doing that to my body.” She gestured toward me. “You won’t manage twins alone anyway. This helps us both.”
She spoke like she was adopting a stray dog.
“I’ll raise the baby as mine. They’ll have the best of everything,” she said, resting her hand on Eddie’s chest. “And you’ll have a roof over your head. Fair trade.”
Eddie nodded along, like this was a normal conversation.
I wanted to scream. But I knew I had to play smart. I had nothing—no family, no money, no support.
So I forced a tear and whispered, “I’ll agree. But I have one condition.”
Vivian’s eyes lit up. “Smart girl. What’s the condition?”
“I want to choose which baby you take. Just give me time to decide which one would have a better life with you.”
They exchanged smug glances. They thought I was broken.
“Fine,” Vivian said. “But don’t take too long. We’ll take the one you don’t want.”
“And one more thing,” I added. “Buy me the house. Don’t rent it. I need stability. If not, the deal’s off.”
Eddie started to object, but Vivian waved him off.
“You’re demanding, but fine. It’ll save me the hassle of finding something else. But keep your word.”
I nodded, looking every bit the desperate woman they believed I was.
Inside, I was smiling.
Over the next few months, I played my part. Vivian bought me a lovely three-bedroom house. Neither of them bothered to read the paperwork closely. I made sure of that.
I kept them updated on my pregnancy. Let Vivian touch my belly. Let her believe she was choosing between her future children.
Then, I went into labor.
I texted Vivian before I left for the hospital but made sure staff knew they weren’t allowed in.
Six hours later, I gave birth to two perfect girls—Lily and Emma.
When the nurse asked if I wanted her to notify my husband, I said, “Tell them the babies are fine, but I need three days.”
I brought my daughters home on day two. On day three, I called Vivian.
“I’m ready,” I told her.
She arrived within the hour, glowing with anticipation. Eddie trailed behind her.
“So,” she said, eyes gleaming. “Which one is mine?”
I stood up, cradling both babies.
“Neither.”
Her smile froze. “Excuse me?”
“I’m not giving you my children.”
Eddie rolled his eyes. “Don’t start this again.”
“You thought you could buy a baby from me? Like I was desperate? Newsflash: I’m not.”
Vivian’s eyes narrowed. “Then get out. You’re done.”
I smiled. “Actually, I’m not. The house? It’s in my name.”
Vivian paled. “What? That’s not possible!”
Eddie looked confused. “We signed the papers together.”
“Exactly. And you both signed it over to me. You were too busy celebrating to notice. My name is the only one on the deed.”
Vivian stumbled back.
“You conniving little—”
“Oh, and one more thing,” I said, rocking Lily as she fussed. “I told some people about how Eddie cheated on his pregnant wife. And how you tried to buy a baby.”
I nodded at the phone on the table.
“Check social media. I posted everything. The messages. The photos. Your sick ‘deal.’ I tagged your company, your investors, and your charity boards too.”
Vivian lunged for my phone. Her face turned ashen.
Eddie grabbed it next. “You—you ruined us!”
“No,” I said calmly. “You ruined yourselves.”
Eddie lost his job. The company couldn’t stomach the scandal. Vivian wasn’t just fired—she was publicly humiliated. Shunned by her professional and social circles.
As for me? I held my daughters each night in our beautiful home, surrounded by peace.
Because I didn’t just survive.
I won.