Seven Months Pregnant, I Joined a Pottery Party. I Didn’t Know I Was Walking Into a Nightmare.
I’m pregnant with my second baby, and everyone kept warning me that the second time around would feel different.
“You’ll be more emotional,” my mom said, in that knowing tone mothers use when they’re waiting for you to admit they were right.
rolled my eyes at her.
Turns out, she wasn’t completely wrong.
But the storm of hormones didn’t come from my unborn child.
It came from my husband.
During this pregnancy, I’ve wanted nothing more than to disappear into the couch with greasy takeout and whatever snack the baby demanded that hour. Hiding felt easier than being social.
But Ava—my best friend and self-appointed pregnancy cheerleader—wasn’t having it.
“I found this adorable pottery studio,” she announced one afternoon while blending me a strawberry smoothie and lecturing me about self-care. My feet were propped up on her coffee table, swollen and aching.
“They do these little pottery parties. You sign up, paint something cute, hang out.”
“We paint pots?” I asked flatly, mentally listing a hundred other things I’d rather do.
“Maybe! Or bowls, or nursery stuff,” she grinned. “Liv, come on. We can make decorations for the baby’s room.”
I sighed dramatically. “Fine. But you’re buying whatever the baby wants tonight.”
“Deal,” she laughed. “I already told Malcolm to stay home with Tess.”
That caught my attention.
Ava had never been Malcolm’s biggest fan. The fact that she’d coordinated with him ahead of time showed how determined she was to drag me out of the house.
When we arrived at the studio, the place was buzzing. Fifteen women, maybe more. Laughter, wine, paint splatters everywhere. It was meant to be lighthearted—a break from real life.
We settled in with our brushes and palettes, and conversation drifted naturally toward birth stories. Some women shared their own. Others repeated tales about sisters or cousins or dramatic midnight deliveries.
Then one woman—brunette, nervous energy, too-wide smile—started telling a story about her boyfriend leaving her on the Fourth of July because his sister-in-law had gone into labor.
“We were watching a movie,” she said. “It was almost midnight. He suddenly got a call and said Olivia was in labor. The whole family was rushing to the hospital. He said he had to go.”
My heart skipped.
Tess was born on July 4th.
And I was Olivia.
Ava and I locked eyes.
Coincidence, I told myself.
It had to be.
The woman kept talking.
“Six months later,” she continued, “I went into labor myself. And guess what? Malcolm missed it.” She let out a bitter laugh. “He said he couldn’t leave because he was babysitting his niece Tess.”
My fingers tightened around the paintbrush.
Ava leaned toward me and whispered, “What are the odds?”
My voice came out smaller than I expected. “Your boyfriend’s name is Malcolm?”
The woman nodded.
I swallowed. “This Malcolm?”
My hands were shaking as I unlocked my phone and showed her my wallpaper—a photo of Malcolm, Tess, and me, my pregnant belly just beginning to show.
Her expression shifted from confusion to horror.
“That’s… your husband?” she asked.
I nodded.
She stared at me, stunned. Then she said the words that cracked my world open.
“He’s my son’s father too.”
The room tilted.
The laughter around us faded into a distant hum. The pottery studio—bright, cheerful, full of women bonding—morphed into something surreal and suffocating.
Not only had my husband cheated.
He had a child with her.
“Water,” I managed to whisper, and Ava bolted from her seat.
The other women watched in stunned silence as the truth settled over the table like ash.
I barely remember walking to the bathroom. I just remember gripping the sink and staring at my reflection while my stomach tightened with more than pregnancy cramps.
Five weeks.
I was due in five weeks.
I didn’t have time for this.
That night, I confronted Malcolm.
There was no dramatic denial. No convincing lie. Just reluctant, exhausted confession.
Yes, there had been an affair.
Yes, there was a child.
Yes, he’d tried to “handle it.”
Each admission felt like another crack spreading across something I’d thought was solid.
I asked him how he could almost miss Tess’s birth. How he could have stood beside another woman while I was at home believing I was building a life with him.
He didn’t have an answer that mattered.
By morning, the marriage I thought I had was in pieces too small to put back together.
Now I’m researching divorce lawyers between bites of chocolate and prenatal vitamins.
This isn’t the family I pictured for my children. I never imagined they’d grow up in separate homes, navigating the complicated reality of a half-sibling born from betrayal.
But I also never imagined staying with a man who could look at me, hold my hand through one pregnancy, and still build a secret life behind my back.
He nearly missed our daughter’s birth because he was with someone else.
That’s not something I can forgive.
My children didn’t choose this. None of the kids did. And I refuse to let his deception define the kind of home they grow up in.
It’s not the future I planned.
But it will be honest.
And from here on out, that’s enough.