Pregnant Wife's Bitcoin Wallet Made Her Controlling Husband Go Pale-hamyt - Chainityai

Pregnant Wife’s Bitcoin Wallet Made Her Controlling Husband Go Pale-hamyt

Sarah Mitchell learned to smile on command in rooms where every man seemed to have a number attached to his name.

At the Metropolitan Museum charity gala, the chandeliers threw gold light over polished marble, champagne glasses, and men who spoke about markets as if they personally owned the future.

Sarah stood beside her husband, Derek, eight months pregnant in a midnight-blue gown he had bought and mentioned often enough that it no longer felt like a gift.

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Her lower back ached, her ankles throbbed, and their daughter kicked whenever Derek’s voice rose above the crowd.

He was telling three investors about a coming acquisition when Sarah saw the children’s hospital table across the hall and remembered the little card in the program asking for pediatric cancer donations.

During a brief pause, she said, “Derek, what if we gave one hundred thousand to the hospital wing tonight?”

The circle turned toward her, and Sarah felt the old instinct to apologize before anyone answered.

Derek smiled his public smile.

“Sweetheart, that’s adorable,” he said, making sure the nearby donors could hear him.

Then he added, “That’s like half my monthly car payment. You don’t understand these numbers.”

Laughter moved through the circle, soft and expensive.

One man suggested an allowance app, and Derek’s mother, Jennifer, touched Sarah’s arm as if moving an embarrassing centerpiece back into place.

“Perhaps stick to baby things, dear,” Jennifer said.

Sarah excused herself before the heat in her face became tears.

In the restroom, behind a locked stall door, she took out the old phone Derek believed was gone and opened an app disguised as a period tracker.

The wallet loaded slowly.

Then the balance appeared.

Twenty-seven thousand Bitcoin and related holdings, valued that morning at roughly 1.8 billion.

Derek had mocked her for suggesting a donation that was less than a breath against what she owned.

The absurdity almost made her laugh, but her daughter kicked, and the laughter caught in her throat.

Four months earlier, Sarah had been clearing boxes in the storage room of their Boston brownstone when she found the recovery phrase tucked inside her old MIT cryptography textbook.

Ocean, butterfly, mountain, storm, whisper, garden, thunder, dream, crystal, river, phoenix, horizon.

She remembered Professor Henderson telling his students in 2011 that Bitcoin might be worthless or might be history.

Sarah had been nineteen, broke, and still brave enough to spend nine hundred dollars she could barely spare.

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