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After He Chose Her Photo, I Chose Freedom Novel Cover

After He Chose Her Photo, I Chose Freedom

I glanced at the clock for what felt like the hundredth time. 8:57 PM. Three minutes until our anniversary dinner was officially late. Not that Ethan had ever been on time for anything that mattered to me in our five years of marriage. The truffle pasta—his favorite—had already cooled twice. I'd reheated it carefully, determined not to let the delicate sauce break. The vanilla-scented candles I'd placed around our dining room had burned down by an inch, their soft glow casting shadows across the crystal glasses I'd meticulously polished this morning. 'He promised,' I whispered to the empty chair across from me. 'He promised he'd be home early tonight.' I smoothed my navy blue dress—the one he'd once absentmindedly commented looked 'fine' on me—and checked my phone again. No messages.
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Chapter 1

I glanced at the clock for what felt like the hundredth time. 8:57 PM. Three minutes until our anniversary dinner was officially late. Not that Ethan had ever been on time for anything that mattered to me in our five years of marriage.

The truffle pasta—his favorite—had already cooled twice. I'd reheated it carefully, determined not to let the delicate sauce break. The vanilla-scented candles I'd placed around our dining room had burned down by an inch, their soft glow casting shadows across the crystal glasses I'd meticulously polished this morning.

'He promised,' I whispered to the empty chair across from me. 'He promised he'd be home early tonight.'

I smoothed my navy blue dress—the one he'd once absentmindedly commented looked 'fine' on me—and checked my phone again. No messages. No missed calls. Nothing but silence from the man who was supposed to be my husband.

Nine o'clock came and went. Then ten. By eleven, I'd blown out most of the candles, leaving just one burning in the center of the table like a lonely sentinel. The pasta sat congealed in its serving dish, the salad wilted. The chocolate soufflé I'd spent hours perfecting had collapsed in on itself, much like my hopes for the evening.

I didn't cry. I'd learned long ago that tears were wasted on Ethan Blackwood. Instead, I sat perfectly still in our cavernous Manhattan penthouse, listening to the tick of the antique grandfather clock that had been his family's wedding gift to us.

Tick. Tick. Tick.

Five years of marriage. Ten years of loving him. And what did I have to show for it? A closet full of designer clothes I wore to events where he barely acknowledged me. A wedding ring he'd never placed on my finger with any real emotion. A marriage certificate for a union that had never truly existed.

Midnight passed, and still I waited. Not because I believed he would come, but because I didn't know what else to do. This empty ritual of waiting for Ethan had become as much a part of me as breathing.

It was nearly two in the morning when I finally heard the elevator doors open. The sound of his footsteps was distinctive—confident, measured, unhurried. He didn't call out my name. He never did.

I rose from the dining table, my legs stiff from sitting so long. I should go to bed, pretend I hadn't spent the entire night waiting. Preserve what little dignity I had left. But something propelled me toward the sound of movement coming from his study.

The door was slightly ajar, a sliver of light spilling into the darkened hallway. I heard a soft groan—a sound I'd never heard from my husband's lips in our bedroom. Curiosity pushed me forward until I stood at the threshold of his private sanctuary.

What I saw froze me in place.

Ethan sat in his leather chair, his back to the door. His suit jacket was draped over the desk, his tie loosened. In one hand, he held a framed photograph I'd never been allowed to touch—Victoria Hayes, his college girlfriend, the woman he'd never stopped loving. His other hand moved rhythmically beneath the desk, his breathing growing more ragged with each stroke.

I should have been shocked. I should have been devastated. Instead, I felt a strange, detached calm wash over me. This moment—this vulgar, pathetic moment—was simply the final confirmation of what I'd known for years but refused to admit: my husband had never been mine.

Perhaps it was the slight shift in the air or some sixth sense, but Ethan suddenly turned his head. Our eyes met. There was no shame in his gaze. No embarrassment at being caught in such an intimate act with a photograph instead of his wife. There was only annoyance at the interruption.

'Close the door,' he muttered, his voice flat and dismissive.

In that moment, something inside me—something that had been bending and stretching for years—finally broke. The last illusion I'd desperately clung to shattered completely.

I closed the door without a word.

I didn't slam it. I didn't scream. I simply closed it with the quiet finality of a woman who had just watched the death of her marriage—a marriage that, I now understood with crystal clarity, had never truly lived.

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