She Found The Custody Papers Before Her Husband Could Steal Her Baby-kieutrinh

The nursery smelled like lavender paint, new wood, and the kind of hope Emma Callahan Weston had spent her whole life being afraid to trust.

She stood in the doorway with one hand on her belly, holding yellow butterfly decals from a discount store, bought with coupons even though her husband’s mansion had more bathrooms than her first apartment had rooms.

Marcus Weston liked the nursery clean, neutral, and expensive, but Emma liked the butterflies because they made the room feel less like a showroom.

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She pressed the first decal over the crib until it held.

Her phone buzzed on the windowsill, and Diane Mercer’s name filled the screen.

Diane had taught kindergarten with Emma back when Emma ate ramen for dinner and carried student artwork in a torn tote bag.

After scolding Emma for decorating instead of resting, Diane asked the question she had been asking for months: “Can you get to your own money if you need it?”

Emma looked at the butterfly on the wall while Marcus’s rules filled her mind: the accounts, the investment papers, the cards, the passwords, and the bills were all handled by him.

He said it was easier that way, and Emma had believed him because she had grown up with nothing and he had grown up with people who used the word portfolio over breakfast.

“I would probably mess it up,” she said, and Diane went quiet in the way that meant she was swallowing panic to keep from frightening Emma.

“That is not romance,” Diane said softly.

Emma told herself Diane was overprotective, but the question followed her down the hallway when she ran out of printer paper for the baby shower invitations.

The supply closet was empty, so she checked the desk drawers.

The bottom one stuck.

When it finally scraped open, a stack of hotel receipts shifted sideways, and a black phone slid into view.

Emma knew it was not Marcus’s usual phone, because his real phone was always in his hand like a second pulse.

Under the phone were receipts from the same Manhattan hotel, always on Thursdays.

Under those was the Tiffany receipt for a princess-cut engagement ring bought last month.

The ring was not hers.

The thing underneath the receipt was worse: a folder labeled Contingency Protocol.

Emma lowered herself to the floor because her legs had stopped believing in her, then opened divorce papers bearing a perfect copy of her signature, though she had never signed them.

There was a custody agreement granting Marcus full rights to the unborn baby and identifying Emma as unstable due to documented mental health history.

There were therapy records from her teenage years in foster care, private pages she had cried through years earlier.

Someone had highlighted abandonment issues, depression, panic, and fear of rejection in yellow.

At the top, in Marcus’s handwriting, were the words evidence of mental instability.

The front door opened below, and Marcus called her name in that warm voice he used whenever he wanted witnesses to hear how gentle he was.

Emma photographed every page with shaking hands.

She had been a teacher before she was Mrs. Weston, and teachers knew one rule when something went wrong.

Document everything.

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