
Abandoned for Another Woman
Chapter 2
I spent the rest of the afternoon in a fog, mechanically completing tasks while my mind replayed Maxwell's words over and over. Eight dollars and ninety cents versus two hundred ninety-nine thousand dollars. The math was so absurd it would have been laughable if it weren't my life.
By the time I arrived home that evening, I had made my decision. The apartment was quiet when I entered, the only sound coming from Maxwell's home office where he was undoubtedly working late again. I knocked on the door frame, and he looked up, his expression neutral as if our earlier conversation had never happened.
"I need to talk to you," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
He sighed, removing his glasses and rubbing the bridge of his nose. "If this is about the coffee thing, can it wait? I'm in the middle of something important."
"No, it can't wait." I stepped into the office. "I'm removing myself from your family credit card system."
That got his attention. He straightened in his chair, brow furrowing. "What? Why would you do that?"
"I think it's for the best." I kept my tone measured, professional even, as if discussing a business transaction rather than the dismantling of yet another piece of our relationship. "After today's... incident, I realized I don't want access to money that comes with interrogations and double standards."
"Double standards?" Maxwell's voice rose slightly. "What are you talking about?"
I took a deep breath. "You interrogated me over an $8.90 coffee purchase while simultaneously spending $299,000 on a necklace for Holly. You've consistently monitored and questioned my small expenses while freely spending hundreds of thousands on her. Last month, you questioned me about a $50 Uber ride when I was stuck in the rain, but you bought Holly a $15,000 purse for her birthday."
I continued, gaining momentum. "Three months ago, you made me justify a $120 dinner with my colleagues, but you took Holly to Paris for a weekend because she was 'feeling down.' This pattern isn't new, Maxwell. I've just been too blind to see it clearly."
Maxwell's face hardened. "That's completely different. Holly needs those things. She's going through a difficult time—"
"She's been 'going through a difficult time' for five years, Maxwell." My voice remained calm despite the storm brewing inside me. "Meanwhile, when I had pneumonia last winter, you left me alone to attend Holly's art show opening."
"You're being petty and jealous." He stood up, towering over the desk. "Holly is fragile. She needs support. You've always been strong and independent—that's what I love about you. You don't need the same kind of attention."
The words struck me like a physical blow. So that was it. My strength, my independence—the very qualities he claimed to admire—were actually the reasons he felt justified in neglecting me.
"I'll have my name removed from the account tomorrow," I said, turning to leave.
"Brianna, you're overreacting," he called after me, but I was already closing the door.
The next evening, I returned home to find Maxwell waiting in the kitchen with a small pastry box. His smile was conciliatory as he pushed it toward me across the counter.
"Peace offering," he said. "Black Swan cake. Your favorite."
I opened the box to find a single slice, clearly half-eaten, the frosting smudged on one side. I looked up at him, waiting for an explanation.
"Holly and I had lunch at that new place downtown," he explained, his tone suggesting I should be grateful. "She couldn't finish her dessert, and I immediately thought of you. I know how much you love their cakes."
Something inside me snapped. Five years of swallowed words and suppressed anger came rushing to the surface.
"You're giving me Holly's leftovers?" My voice was barely above a whisper. "As a romantic gesture?"
Maxwell's expression shifted from confidence to confusion. "I thought you'd appreciate it. It's expensive cake, Brianna."
"Expensive cake that someone else already ate half of." I closed the box with deliberate care. "This perfectly sums up our entire relationship, doesn't it? You give Holly the best of everything, and I get whatever's left over. Her scraps. Her afterthoughts."
"That's not fair," Maxwell's voice hardened. "You're being ungrateful. Do you have any idea what I've provided for you over these years? This apartment, vacations, that designer bag you wanted last Christmas—"
"The bag you got me after I mentioned it three times, while you surprised Holly with a spontaneous trip to the Maldives because she was 'feeling stressed'?" I countered.
"She needs more support because of her mental health," Maxwell insisted, his face reddening. "You're being unreasonable to expect the same treatment. Holly is—"
"Holly is always the priority," I finished for him. "And I'm expected to be grateful for the leftovers."
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