I Was Seven Months Pregnant When My Husband Came Home and Found His Sister Counting My Bruises
“Four bruises,” my husband’s sister said, easing my sleeve back into place. “Wear the navy dress tonight. The trustees can’t see them.”
Then the front door opened.
Rowan stood in the entrance, still holding his suitcase.
He had returned eighteen hours earlier than expected.
Celeste released my wrist. I was still kneeling beside the wine she had spilled across the marble floor, a wet cloth clenched in one hand while the other supported my seven-month belly.
Rowan looked at the bucket.
Then at my swollen wrist.
“What happened?”
“She slipped,” Celeste said without hesitation. “Abigail’s been clumsy lately.”
I tried to rise before he noticed anything else. A sudden tightening moved through my stomach, and I grabbed the table for support.
Rowan dropped his suitcase and reached me before anyone else.
“Abby?”
“I’m all right.”
It was the same lie I had repeated during every video call throughout his six-week trip.
I kept my sleeves lowered. I smiled while Celeste listened outside the bedroom door. I blamed my exhaustion on the baby.
Celeste crossed her arms. “She’s upset because I asked her to clean up the mess she made.”
“It was your wine,” I said.
For one second, her polished expression slipped.
Rowan noticed.
He also noticed the document on the kitchen counter—the medical order Celeste had removed from my purse and left beneath a stack of household bills.
He read it aloud.
“Limited activity. No heavy lifting. Avoid prolonged standing due to early contractions.”
His voice became quieter. “Why is my pregnant wife scrubbing the floor?”
Celeste gave a soft, weary laugh. “Because your pregnant wife has done nothing for six weeks except spend money and make the staff wait on her.”
“This is my home too,” I said.
“Only because you married into it.”
Rowan turned toward her. “Step away from my wife.”
Celeste held his gaze, but eventually obeyed.
He helped me into a chair and crouched in front of me. When he pushed my sleeve farther up, fresh purple marks appeared beside older bruises that had already turned yellow.
His face changed.
“Who did this?”
I looked past him toward Celeste.
“Ask her why I missed my appointment Tuesday.”
Rowan stood.
Celeste answered before he could ask. “The clinic rescheduled.”
“No,” Lena, the household driver, said from the hallway.
Celeste spun around.
Lena’s hands shook, but her voice remained steady. “You told me Mrs. Armand wasn’t allowed to leave without your permission. Then you took the keys.”
The room became silent.
Celeste recovered quickly. “I was protecting her. She’s emotional, she’s careless, and she has no idea what she’s been charging to the family trust.”
She turned toward Rowan as though I were no longer present.
“Private nurses. Medical transportation. Home monitoring. Eighty-six thousand four hundred dollars in six weeks.”
I stared at her.
“I haven’t had a private nurse.”
Celeste’s mouth tightened. “The records don’t lie.”
Rowan opened the secure trust portal on his laptop.
Twelve payments appeared on the screen.
**ABIGAIL FROST — PRENATAL CARE REIMBURSEMENT.**
**TOTAL: $86,400.**
He turned the laptop toward me.
“Abigail, did you receive any of this?”
“Not one dollar.”
Celeste moved so abruptly that her chair struck the wall. She reached for the computer, but Rowan pulled it away.
“She built that system,” Celeste snapped. “She could have changed anything.”
That was when I finally understood what she intended to do at the trustees’ meeting that night.
The navy dress was not merely supposed to conceal my bruises.
It was meant to make me appear composed while she accused me of stealing.
Celeste reached toward the laptop again.
I covered it with one hand.
“Don’t bother,” I said.
The color disappeared from her face.
“The original audit left this house three days ago.”
CONTINUE READING