Stories

I left the hospital with my newborn and a bus ticket—while my husband drove off in a Maybach to eat hotpot with his family. Two hours later, he went bankrupt, and the truth about who I was terrified them all.

 

I had just been discharged from the hospital after giving birth, my body still aching, my legs weak, and my newborn daughter sleeping against my chest. The nurse helped me into a wheelchair and asked gently, “Is your husband here to pick you up?” I looked around the entrance, my heart sinking. Victor wasn’t there. Ten minutes later, he called. His voice was impatient. “Natalie, take the bus home. I’m busy.”

I froze. “Victor, I just gave birth. I can barely stand.” At home, I laid my daughter in the crib and finally let the tears fall. This wasn’t the first time Victor had treated me like this. Since his startup began making money, he had changed. He flaunted luxury cars, expensive dinners, and constantly reminded me, “Without me, you’d be nothing.”

What Victor never cared to ask was where the initial money came from.

Two hours later, my phone began vibrating nonstop. Messages flooded in from Victor, his mother, his sister—dozens of missed calls. Confused, I answered one.

“Natalie!” Victor’s voice was panicked. “Where are you? Something terrible happened.”

Before I could ask, his mother grabbed the phone, screaming, “Tell me the truth right now! Who are you really?”

At that exact moment, a breaking news alert flashed across my screen: Victor Lang’s company declared bankrupt amid sudden withdrawal of all major funding.

I looked down at my sleeping daughter, my expression calm for the first time that day.

And then, I smiled.

Victor showed up at the apartment less than an hour later. He didn’t knock—he burst in, his face pale, his suit wrinkled, his confidence completely gone. His parents and sister followed behind him, no longer laughing, no longer filming, no longer proud.

“What did you do?” Victor demanded, his voice shaking.

I slowly closed the door behind them and gestured for them to sit. “First,” I said quietly, “lower your voice. You’re scaring the baby.”

His mother stared at the modest apartment, disbelief all over her face. “This place… you said you rented it because you were cheap.”

I smiled faintly. “I said it was temporary.”

Victor ran his hands through his hair. “All the investors pulled out at once. Every account was frozen. My board resigned. This doesn’t just happen by coincidence.”

“No,” I agreed. “It doesn’t.”

I finally told them the truth Victor had never bothered to learn. Years ago, before I met him, my father had founded a private investment group. I never used his last name publicly. When Victor pitched his startup, my father believed in the idea—not because of Victor, but because I asked him to.

The initial capital. The emergency loans. The connections. All of it came through me.

Victor’s sister stood up abruptly. “So you’re saying… we owe everything to you?”

“Yes,” I replied calmly. “And you lost it the moment Victor decided I was disposable.”

Victor dropped to his knees. “Natalie, I didn’t mean it. I was stressed. My family needed me.” I looked at him, remembering the bus ride, the stares, the pain. “So did your wife. So did your child.”

His mother’s voice cracked. “Please… we didn’t know.”

“You didn’t ask,” I said. “You just enjoyed the Maybach.”

They left that night in silence. No threats. No arrogance. Just fear.

The next morning, my father called. “Do you want me to reverse the decision?”

I looked at my daughter and answered softly, “No. I want her to grow up knowing her worth doesn’t depend on someone else’s mercy.”

Weeks passed. The news spread quickly. Victor’s company dissolved completely. Lawsuits followed. The Maybach was repossessed. The family that once mocked me avoided my calls, then stopped calling altogether.

Victor tried to apologize again. He sent long messages, voice notes filled with regret, promises to change. I read none of them. Instead, I filed for divorce.

Raising a newborn alone wasn’t easy, but for the first time, I felt free. I moved into a new home—still modest, but warm. I returned to work, this time openly, no longer hiding behind silence. People treated me with respect, not because of my money, but because of my confidence.

One afternoon, as I rocked my daughter to sleep, I thought about that day at the hospital. The bus. The humiliation. The moment I realized I had allowed someone to define my value.

Never again.

Victor’s family later tried to reach my father, hoping for help. His response was simple: “You taught my daughter how not to be treated. That lesson was expensive—but necessary.”

I didn’t seek revenge. I sought peace. And sometimes, peace comes when you finally stop begging for a seat in someone else’s car—and start walking your own road.

He sighed loudly, as if I were inconveniencing him. “Don’t be dramatic. The bus stop is right outside the hospital. I’ll have my driver take my parents and my sister out to hotpot. They’re hungry.”

Before I could respond, the call ended.

I watched, stunned, as Victor’s black Maybach rolled past the hospital entrance. Through the tinted window, I saw his mother laughing, his sister filming stories on her phone, and Victor sitting comfortably in the back seat. Not one of them looked my way.

With trembling hands, I adjusted my coat, held my baby tighter, and slowly made my way to the bus stop. Every bump of the ride felt like punishment. Other passengers stared with pity, some offering seats, others whispering. I swallowed my humiliation in silence.

He made his wife, who had just given birth, carry their baby home on a bus—while his entire family rode in a car to eat hotpot. How do you think that ended???

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