I was eight months pregnant when my husband walked out on me, our seven kids, and the life we had spent fifteen years building. Weeks later, while he grinned beside his much younger bride at a beach altar, one small gift turned his fairytale into a public reckoning.
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The nursery smelled like fresh paint and baby powder when my husband walked in carrying a suitcase.
I was on the floor with crib screws lined up by my knee, one ankle swollen over my slipper, trying to make sense of instructions that kept blurring.
At forty-five and eight months pregnant, I was still shocked my body had done this again. Standing up needed a strategy and a prayer.
So when I saw my husband, Evan, with a bag in his hand, my first thought was that he had a work trip.
“Why do you have a suitcase?” I asked.
The nursery smelled like fresh paint and baby powder.
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He set it down beside the door. “I can’t do this anymore.”
I laughed because the alternative was throwing up. “Do what, exactly, sweetie?”
“The noise, the diapers, the chaos, Savannah.”
His hand moved toward my stomach.
“And this.”