He Threw His Pregnant Wife Out on Christmas Eve for His Mistress – A Private Helicopter Landed for Her in Minutes.
Stepping into the Snow
Charlotte said nothing. She picked up her suitcase. She walked to the open door. She stepped out into the snow. The cold hit her like a physical blow. The wind cut through her cashmere sweater like it was tissue paper. Snow immediately began soaking through her ballet flats.
She did not look back. The door slammed behind her. The sound was final, absolute, the sound of a life ending. Charlotte stood on the front porch for a moment, just breathing, just existing, just trying to understand what had just happened.
Then she started walking down the steps, one at a time, careful not to slip on the ice. A fall could hurt the baby. She had to protect the baby. That was all that mattered now, that was all that.
The driveway stretched before her: 300 feet of cobblestone leading to the front gate. It was covered in snow now, white and pristine and beautiful. Under other circumstances, Charlotte would have thought it was magical, a winter wonderland, a Christmas postcard. Now it looked like a frozen desert, an endless expanse of cold and white and nothing.
She passed the garden where they were married three years ago, June. The roses had been in full bloom. Derrick had cried when he saw her walking down the aisle. Real tears, or so she had thought. The roses were dormant now, buried under snow, sleeping until spring. Charlotte wondered if they knew. If plants could sense betrayal, if they were ashamed to have witnessed vows that meant nothing.
She passed the greenhouse where she told Derek about the pregnancy. Where he had picked her up and spun her around. Where he had pressed his hand to her still flat belly and promised to be the best father in the world. More lies. More performance, more careful manipulation. Each step was a memory; each memory was now poison.
The Wall Cracks
The gate loomed ahead, black iron against white snow. Charlotte reached it and stopped. Her feet were completely numb now. She could not feel her toes at all. Her fingers were stiff with cold. The baby had gone quiet inside her. Was that bad? She did not know. She needed to get warm; she needed to think.
Charlotte looked back at the house one last time. The lights glowed in the windows, warm and golden and inviting. The Christmas tree was visible through the living room window. The one Charlotte had decorated three weeks ago. The one with the hand blown ornaments she had collected from their travels: Paris, Rome, Barcelona; each one a memory.
In the upstairs window she saw movement. Derek’s silhouette. Then another silhouette joined his: Vanessa. They were not even waiting until Charlotte was off the property.
Something broke inside Charlotte then. Something she had been holding together with hope and denial and sheer force of will for a very long time. It cracked, shattered, fell away. And in its place, something new began to form. She did not know yet what it was, could not name it, could not understand it. But she knew it was important, knew it would save her.
Charlotte turned away from the house, from the life she had built, from the man she had loved.
Seven Minutes
She pulled out her phone and dialed a number she had not called in three years. It rang once. The sound was distant, faint, like it was traveling across an ocean. It rang twice. Charlotte’s heart pounded in her chest. Three times. She was about to give up, about to accept that she was truly alone. Then, click.
“Charlotte,” her grandmother’s voice: sharp, alert, completely awake despite the late hour in Switzerland. “Is that you?”. “Grandmother,” Charlotte’s voice broke on the word. All the walls she had built came crashing down. “Grandmother, it is Charlotte. I need to come home,”.
Silence on the other end, just for a moment, just long enough for Charlotte to feel the full weight of her terror. Then Eleanor Ashford spoke again. “Where are you?”. “Connecticut. Derek’s house, the estate,”.
Charlotte was crying now; she could not stop. “He threw me out. I am standing in the snow. I am eight months pregnant, and I have nowhere to go. I have no one. I have nothing,”.
“Stop,” Eleanor’s voice cut through Charlotte’s panic like a blade: sharp and commanding and absolutely certain. “Stop crying. Take a breath. Are you injured?”.
Charlotte forced herself to breathe in, out, in, out. “No, I am not injured, but I am so cold and the baby—”.
“Listen to me very carefully, Charlotte. Stay exactly where you are. Do not move. Do not speak to anyone. Do not go back inside that house, no matter what happens. Help is coming,”.
“Grandmother, I do not understand. You are in Switzerland. How can you possibly—”. “Stay where you are. Do not move. Do not. Seven minutes,” the call ended.
Charlotte stared at her phone. The screen glowed in the darkness. Snowflakes landed on it and melted instantly. Seven minutes. What could possibly happen in seven minutes?.
She pulled her suitcase closer, wrapped her arms around herself. Tried to conserve whatever body heat she had left. The cold was unbearable now. It had seeped through her clothes, through her skin, into her bones. Her teeth chattered so hard she bit her tongue, tasted blood.
She thought about her father, James Ashford, dead when she was 12 years old. He had been the one who told her she could be anything she wanted, the one who promised to always protect her. What would he think of her now, standing in the snow, pregnant, abandoned, discarded like garbage?
He would be furious. Not at her, at Derek, at the world that let this happen. And himself for not being there to prevent it. Charlotte closed her eyes. She could almost hear his voice, almost feel his arms around her. “Hold on, sweetheart. Just hold on. Help is coming,”.
Four minutes passed, then five. The snow fell harder, the wind picked up. Charlotte’s whole body shook with cold. Then she heard it: distant at first, so faint she thought she might be imagining it. A rhythmic sound, a throbbing, getting closer.
