Stories: I stole a married man

I stole a married man.

At least, that’s how people would say it. At the time, I called it “love.” I called his wife “an obstacle.” I called myself “the one he truly wanted.”

When she found my number and called me crying, her voice shaking as she begged me to stop, I didn’t even hesitate.

“Save your whining for someone who cares,” I snapped. “He’s gone. Fix yourself.”

I hung up and felt powerful. Untouchable.

A year later, I was pregnant and glowing with smug happiness. He had moved in with me, bought tiny baby shoes, and promised that this time we’d be a real family. A better one.

Then one afternoon, after my checkup, I waddled up the steps to our apartment and found a note taped to the door.

The handwriting was neat. Calm.

“Run. Even you don’t deserve what he’s about to do.”

My stomach dropped so fast I thought I’d be sick right there on the welcome mat.

Inside, the apartment was too quiet. His shoes were gone. His cologne bottle—gone. The drawers were half-open like the place had been ransacked, but nothing valuable was missing.

Then my phone buzzed.

A message from an unknown number.

A single photo.

It was a screenshot of a group chat.

His name at the top.

A thread of laughing emojis and words that made my throat close:

“She thinks I’m staying.”
“She’s pregnant… that’s her problem.”
“Just waiting until she delivers so I don’t look like the bad guy.”

My hands went cold. I couldn’t breathe.

I read it again. And again. Hoping it would change.

It didn’t.

A second message came through.

“He did this to me too. I’m his wife.”

My knees buckled. I sank onto the floor, staring at the screen like it was a weapon pointed at my chest. The anger rushed in next—hot, humiliating, choking.

I wanted to blame her.

But I couldn’t.

Because the truth hit me all at once: I hadn’t “won” a man. I’d taken a liar off someone else’s hands… and wrapped him like a gift.

I typed back with shaking fingers.

“Why warn me?”

Her reply came fast.

“Because you’re carrying a baby. And because I remember what it feels like to be fooled.”

That night, I didn’t cry over him.

I cried over who I had been.

The next morning, I packed every trace of him into a trash bag and left it outside the building like spoiled food. I changed my number. I called a lawyer. I called my sister. I finally told someone the truth.

Months later, I gave birth to a beautiful baby girl.

And on the day I held her for the first time, I made a promise—quiet, trembling, real:

My daughter would never grow up thinking love is something you steal.

And I would never again confuse cruelty with strength.

Because the most satisfying ending wasn’t revenge.

It was waking up… and choosing to become someone better.

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