When I found out I was pregnant, I hoped our baby would save us. For a few weeks, he seemed joyful.
Then Katia called, claiming Julian wanted a baby with her too, and that my "score" in his affection was dropping.
In a moment of raw frustration, I slapped her. His punishment was swift and brutal.
He had me arrested, three months pregnant, leaving me in a cold holding cell.
He even leaned down to my belly and whispered, "Your mother was naughty. This is her punishment."
The man who once moved heaven and earth for me now abandoned me to a cell, prioritizing his mistress. My fairy tale had become a nightmare, and I couldn't understand how it had come to this.
Chapter 1
The cold metal of the handcuffs bit into Esther' s wrists. She stared at her husband, Julian Mcgee, his face a mask of cold indifference. Beside him, Katia French clung to his arm, a faint, triumphant smile on her lips.
"Julian, please," Esther begged, her voice cracking. "I didn' t touch her. She fell on her own."
Julian' s gaze was like ice. He was a legal prodigy, the heir to a New York dynasty, the man who was supposed to love her forever. Now, he looked at her as if she were a stranger, a piece of trash to be discarded.
"Take her away," he said to the officers he had personally called. "She needs to learn a lesson."
He did this to appease Katia, his new obsession. He did this while Esther was three months pregnant with their child.
The officers hesitated, their eyes flicking to Esther' s belly. "Sir, she' s pregnant."
"It' s just a night in a holding cell," Julian said, his voice devoid of any warmth. "A little time to reflect on her actions."
He then leaned down, his face close to Esther' s stomach, and spoke in a chillingly soft tone. "You hear that, little one? Your mother was naughty. This is her punishment. You have to be good and not cause her any trouble."
A wave of pure terror washed over Esther. This wasn't the man she married. This was a monster wearing his face.
"Julian, it' s your baby," she whispered, tears streaming down her face. "Our baby."
He scoffed, a cruel, ugly sound. "Then why did you try to hurt Katia? Did you think about our baby then?"
He didn't wait for an answer. He turned, guiding a "shaken" Katia away, leaving Esther to be led to a police car. The world had tilted on its axis, and Esther was in a free fall. Her fairy tale had become a nightmare.
She couldn' t understand how it had come to this.
Julian Mcgee was the golden boy of Manhattan' s elite, the brilliant heir to the Mcgee corporate empire. And he had chosen her, Esther Briggs, a simple textile artist from a middle-class family.
They had been married for five years, together for eight.
He was the man who had defied his powerful, elitist parents, Bert and Caryl Mcgee, to be with her. They saw her as a commoner, an unworthy addition to their dynasty.
But Julian had once been her champion, utterly devoted. He'd fly back from international trips just for dinner, buy out entire galleries for a single piece of her art, and even threatened to sever ties with his family over an arranged marriage, declaring, "Esther is the only woman I will ever marry. Without her, the Mcgee empire can crumble for all I care."
He had built her a private art studio in their penthouse overlooking Central Park, sourcing the finest materials from around the world. He would sit for hours just watching her work, his eyes full of a love so deep it felt tangible.
When he proposed, he had rented out the entire Metropolitan Museum of Art for the night. He got down on one knee in the Temple of Dendur, and his voice trembled as he asked her to be his wife.
Everyone said she was the luckiest woman in the world.
She had believed it, too.
Then, six months ago, Katia French appeared.
Esther first heard the name from a friend, a gossip columnist who covered the city' s high society.
"There' s this new 'performance artist' in town, Katia French," her friend had said over lunch. "She' s making waves. She showed up at a fundraiser and publicly declared she was going to conquer the most unattainable man in New York: your Julian."
The story became the talk of their circle. Katia was a social media influencer, a self-proclaimed artist whose medium was psychological manipulation. She was cunning, and she targeted powerful, wealthy men.
Friends warned Esther. "Be careful. This woman is a predator."
Esther had laughed it off.
"Julian loves me," she' d said, completely confident.
Her confidence wasn't baseless. It was built on eight years of unwavering devotion. It was built on the memory of him shielding her from his family' s scorn. It was built on the quiet nights and the passionate declarations. She was his world. No silly influencer could change that.
Then she found the secret folder on his laptop.
It was late one night. Julian was asleep, and she was using his computer to look up a recipe. The folder was labeled "K.F. Project." Inside were hundreds of photos of Katia French. Some were professional, others were candid shots taken from a distance. There were notes, detailed analyses of Katia' s social media posts, her likes, her dislikes. It was an obsession laid bare.
A sharp pain shot through Esther' s stomach. She felt sick.
She woke him up, her hands shaking as she held the laptop. "What is this, Julian?"
He looked at the screen, and for a moment, a flicker of something unreadable crossed his face before he composed himself. He pulled her into his arms, his voice smooth and reassuring.
"Esther, my love, it' s nothing. She' s... interesting. A subject of... curiosity, that's all."
"A curiosity?" she' d asked, her voice tight.
"Her whole 'brand' is fascinating from a marketing perspective," he explained, the excuse sounding flimsy even to his own ears. "It's a new frontier of influence. I'm just... studying her methods. You know how I get."
He promised her he would never betray her. He promised to handle it.
And she, clinging to the memory of the man who had adored her, chose to believe him.
His way of "handling it" was to begin an affair with Katia.
He started bringing Katia to public events, introducing her as a "business associate." The first time, at a charity auction, he had seated Katia at their table. The humiliation was a physical blow. Esther felt the eyes of everyone in the room on her.
She had confronted him when they got home, her voice rising with every word of betrayal she threw at him.
"I want a divorce, Julian."
His demeanor changed instantly. The charming facade dropped, replaced by a chilling coldness. "No."
"You can' t do this to me!"
"Don' t be dramatic, Esther," he' d said, his voice low and dangerous. "You' re my wife. You will remain my wife. Don' t you ever say that word to me again."
His words were like a physical slap, stunning her into silence.
The next day, Katia called her.
"Hi, Esther. I just wanted to see how you are." Her voice was sickly sweet. "Julian feels so bad that you were upset last night."
"What do you want?" Esther asked, her voice flat.
"I'm just calling to let you know where you stand. I have a little system I use to track people's affection. A likability score, you could say. Right now, his score for me is at 75%. Yours, well... it's been dropping."
Esther hung up.
A few days later, she found out she was pregnant. It was the one thing she thought could save them. A baby. Their baby. It had to bring back the old Julian.
When she told him, he seemed joyful. For a few weeks, things were almost normal. He was attentive, caring. He talked about names and nurseries. Hope, fragile and desperate, began to bloom in Esther' s chest.
Then Katia called again.
"Congratulations," Katia said, her voice dripping with false sincerity. "But a baby won' t change anything. In fact, Julian just told me he wants me to have his baby too. He thinks our child would be a true work of art. My score for him is at 85% now. He'll be mine completely soon. You, your house, your baby... it will all be mine."
Something inside Esther snapped. The months of gaslighting, humiliation, and pain erupted. That afternoon, when Katia showed up at their penthouse uninvited, Esther slapped her.
It wasn' t a hard slap, more a release of frustration. But Katia saw her opportunity.
Julian' s punishment was swift and brutal.
He had her arrested.
Now, sitting in the cold, sterile holding cell, the single light bulb buzzing overhead, Esther felt the last remnants of her love for him die.
The humiliation, the threats, the public affair-she had endured it all. But having her arrested while she was carrying his child... this was a new level of cruelty.
She touched her belly. The little life inside was the only thing connecting her to the man she once loved.
And she realized, with a clarity that was both terrifying and liberating, that she had to sever that connection too.
She looked at the grimy walls of the cell. She saw the faces of the other women, their expressions ranging from despair to resignation.
She had been out for a few hours. The city air felt heavy and polluted. The doorman at their building looked at her with pity.
She walked into the silent apartment. Julian wasn't there. Of course he wasn't. He was probably with Katia.
A message pinged on her phone. It was a photo from an unknown number. Julian and Katia, wrapped in each other's arms on a private jet. They were laughing. The caption read: "He' s taking me to Paris for the weekend. A real artist needs inspiration."
Another message followed. "Just give up, Esther. You' ve already lost. Sign the divorce papers he leaves you and walk away with some dignity."
Esther stared at Julian' s face in the photo. The eyes that once looked at her with so much love now held a cold, possessive gleam for another woman.
The love was gone. All of it. Replaced by a cold, hard resolve.
She would not just walk away. She would leave her mark.
She sent a single email to her lawyer, attaching a scanned copy of a divorce petition. "File this immediately."
She sent another message, this one to Katia. "You want the Mcgee fortune? Help me finalize this divorce, and it' s one step closer to being yours."
Then, she booked a one-way ticket to London, a place where she had a history, a friend. A place to disappear.
Her last stop was a private clinic in a discreet part of the city.
She sat across from the doctor, her hands folded in her lap.
"I want an abortion," she said, her voice steady. "And I want the fetus preserved."