At Dinner, My Sister Announced She Was Pregnant – and That My Husband Is the Father…
The Empty Apartment
I got home and the apartment was exactly as I had left it that morning. Made bed, dishes washed, everything in place.
It was strange how life could completely fall apart and things could remain exactly the same.
David’s toothbrush was still there in the bathroom, his clothes in the closet, and that ridiculous Dallas Cowboys mug he’d gotten in a dealership promotion.
I sat on the beige leather sofa in the living room, still in my dress and high heels, and stared into the void.
My head was strangely quiet, as if my brain had shut down the emotion processing system. I knew I should be crying, screaming, or breaking things, but all I felt was a kind of numbness, like when you hit your elbow and can’t feel your arm for a few minutes.
David didn’t come home that night, obviously. At 2:00 in the morning, I received a message.
“I’m at Bee’s house. We’ll talk tomorrow. B.”
He called my sister Bee, as if they’d been intimate for years. As if I didn’t exist.
As if our four years of marriage were just an inconvenient obstacle that had finally been removed.
I spent the night awake, walking through the 120 meters of the apartment, trying to understand how I had gotten there. How hadn’t I noticed?
The signs were there: David working later in recent weeks, Beatrice asking about my schedule whenever she called, both of them arriving together at the restaurant as if it were the most natural thing in the world.
Now that I thought about it, Beatrice had appeared a lot in Austin in recent months.
“I came to see some clients,” she’d say.
Beatrice worked as a freelance graphic designer, so it was plausible that she had projects in the city, but Austin was only an hour and a half from San Antonio. Why did she always stay in hotels?
Why didn’t she ever ask to sleep on my couch like she used to?
When the sun rose, I was still on the couch with my dress wrinkled and makeup smeared. My iPhone showed 17 missed calls from my mother.
Beatrice had told her everything, probably in a romanticized version where they were two lovers who couldn’t resist the cruel fate that made them meet through me.
I called the office and said I wouldn’t be going to work. Simone, my assistant, noticed something was wrong from the tone of my voice but didn’t insist.
“Call me if you need anything, Marina. You never miss work. It must be something important.”
She was one of the few people I could trust completely. I went to take a shower, trying to wash away the sticky feeling from that night.,
Under the hot water, I finally cried. Not dramatic movie tears, but that tired crying of someone who had just lost two important people at once.
My sister and my husband, the two I loved most in the world, had betrayed me in the cruelest way possible.
When I got out of the shower, I had three messages from Beatrice.
“Mari, we need to talk. It wasn’t how we wanted you to find out. Call me, please. I know it’s difficult, but we can resolve this like adults.”
I deleted them all without responding.
The Confrontation and the Discovery
For the first time in years, I spent the entire day doing absolutely nothing productive.
I watched Netflix, ordered Chinese food that cost $40 and arrived cold, and ignored the phone that rang every 2 hours. It was as if I needed a whole day to process the fact that my life had completely changed overnight.
That evening, David showed up to get some clothes. He still had the keys and still felt entitled to enter the apartment I had bought alone, as if nothing had happened.
He tried to talk, explain, and justify himself while packing a suitcase with his things.
“It wasn’t planned, Mari. It just happened.”
As if betrayal were a meteorological accident, something beyond human control.
“Bee was going through a difficult time. Needed someone to talk to.”
“How long have you been together?” I asked, watching him fold the polo shirts I had bought for him at Nordstrom.
“Officially since January. 4 months.”
Four months of lies, fake kisses, and empty “I love yous” before sleep.
While I worked 60 hours a week to get the promotion, dreaming of our future together, he was building a new life with my sister.
“I’m going to find a lawyer,” I warned, sitting on the king-sized bed I had bought the year before.
David stopped packing his suitcase and looked at me for the first time since he arrived.
“Mari, it doesn’t have to be like this. We can resolve everything among ourselves civilly. Divide things fairly without complications.”
Civilly? Divide things fairly?
As if betrayal were an issue that could be resolved with politeness and goodwill. As if he had any right to what I had built.,
After he left, taking two suitcases and promising to come back on the weekend to get the rest, I called Helena, my best friend since college and a family law attorney in Houston.
I told her everything, trying to keep my voice steady. Helena listened to me in silence, and when I finished, she sighed deeply.
“Marina, I’m so sorry. I know how much you loved him and trusted your sister.”
She paused.
“About the divorce, I need you to bring all the marriage documents: bank statements, deeds, proof of income, investments, everything. I’ll put together the best case possible for you.”
“Helena, I don’t care about the money. I just want this to end quickly.”
“Don’t say that, Marina. You fought hard to build what you have. You’re not going to hand it over to someone who betrayed you. Do you have any idea how much your assets are worth today?”
I didn’t have an exact idea, but I knew it was substantial.
The apartment was worth at least $400,000. I had about 100,000 in investments, a stake in a startup worth at least 50,000, plus the new salary of $16,000 monthly.,
I scheduled the meeting for the following week and hung up. That’s when I remembered I needed to organize all the important documents.
It wasn’t something I did regularly. Who thinks about divorce when they’re happy in marriage?
I went to the office I had set up in the second bedroom of the apartment, where I kept everything organized in colored folders like a person obsessed with control.
Bank statements from the last 2 years, tax returns, and investment statements from Fidelity and Charles Schwab. It was impressive to see on paper everything I had achieved at 29.
I was proud of what I had built, but now everything seemed so fragile, as if it could disappear because of a betrayal and a poorly conducted divorce process.
I took the green folder where I kept the marriage documents: birth certificate, marriage certificate from Travis County, contract for…
I stopped with the marriage certificate in my hand, frowning. There was something written there about the property regime that suddenly caught my attention.,
“Separate property regime, complete separation of assets.”
Why complete separation? Most couples in Texas chose community property or partial community of assets.
That’s when I remembered vaguely, like a memory that was stored in a dusty drawer of my brain: a prenuptial agreement.
