
After Discovering His Affair With the Executive Assistant, I Left
Chapter 3
I stared at the small diamond earring nestled in my palm, its facets catching the morning light streaming through our bedroom window. It wasn't mine. The delicate stud had been half-hidden under our bedspread when I'd stripped the sheets, a glittering betrayal against the Egyptian cotton.
Julian's earring. Savannah's ear.
My stomach clenched as I recognized it—identical to the pair she'd worn at Eleanor's dinner party last week, when she'd leaned in too close to Julian, laughing at his jokes with practiced adoration while I sat forgotten across the table.
I waited in the living room, the earring burning a hole in my pocket. When Julian finally came home that evening, loosening his tie as he strode through the door, I approached him with a calmness that surprised even me.
"I found something today," I said, holding out my palm to reveal the diamond stud.
Julian barely glanced at it before his eyes met mine, not a flicker of shame or remorse crossing his face. Instead, his lips curled into that familiar smirk that made my skin crawl.
"At least this time it was someone worth looking at," he said, the casual cruelty in his voice stealing my breath. "You should thank me for my discretion. Most men would have left by now."
Something inside me—something that had been bending for years—finally snapped.
"I'm moving into the guest room," I said, my voice steady despite the trembling in my hands.
Julian laughed, the sound hollow and mocking. "By all means. It's not like we've shared a bed in months anyway." He plucked the earring from my palm. "I'll return this to Savannah. She was quite upset about losing it."
I turned away before he could see the tears threatening to spill. I wouldn't give him that satisfaction.
The guest room felt both foreign and familiar as I began transferring my clothes from our shared closet. Each armful represented another piece of our marriage dissolving, another admission that what we once had was irretrievably lost. The weight of it—years of memories, broken promises, and humiliation—suddenly crashed over me.
My knees hit the carpet as the first sob escaped, then another, until I was gasping for breath between waves of grief. Not for Julian—I'd mourned him long ago—but for the woman I'd been before him, for the family I'd lost twice over.
A soft knock at the door barely registered through my tears.
"Mrs. Hayes?"
Elena stood in the doorway, her kind eyes taking in the scene without judgment—me kneeling on the floor surrounded by scattered clothes, mascara streaking down my cheeks. Our housekeeper had been with me since before Julian, one of the few constants in my unraveling life.
She disappeared briefly, returning with a steaming cup of chamomile tea and something tucked under her arm. Without a word, she helped me to the edge of the bed and pressed the warm mug into my hands.
"Drink," she said softly. "It helps."
As I sipped the tea, Elena placed a worn shoebox beside me. "I saved these when you were... clearing things out last year," she explained, her accent thickening with emotion. "I thought someday you might want them back."
Inside were photographs—my parents laughing on our sailboat, me graduating from high school, family Christmases from before the bankruptcy. Fragments of a life Julian had convinced me to pack away because they "cluttered his aesthetic."
"He has no right to treat you this way," Elena whispered, her voice barely audible. "The games he plays... You deserve better."
The simple validation—the first I'd heard in so long—brought fresh tears to my eyes.
"Thank you," I managed, clutching one of the photographs to my chest.
Elena squeezed my shoulder before quietly leaving me with my memories and my tea.
Three days later, Mia's text arrived like a thunderbolt:
*Are you okay? Julian called. Said you've been having episodes. Why didn't you tell me things were so bad?*
My fingers froze over the screen. Episodes? I hadn't spoken to Julian about Mia in weeks.
I called her immediately, but her voice was guarded, distant. "Charlotte, I'm worried about you. Julian says you've been unstable, that you're imagining things about him and Savannah."
"That's not true," I insisted, panic rising in my throat. "He's lying, Mia. He's trying to isolate me."
"He's concerned," she countered. "He suggested you might need... professional help. More than just couples therapy."
"You believe him? After everything I've told you?"
The silence on the other end was deafening.
"I think you both need space," she finally said. "Call me when you're feeling more... yourself."
The line went dead, and with it, my last lifeline to the world outside Julian's control. I stared at my phone in disbelief, watching as my oldest friendship slipped through my fingers like sand.
In the reflection of the darkened screen, I hardly recognized myself anymore.
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