
After He Gave Our Baby's Locket to His Mistress's Dog
Chapter 3
My phone vibrated on the nightstand, pulling me from a fitful sleep. Three days had passed since I'd placed the divorce papers in the guest room, and Ryan had been conspicuously absent since then. Part of me was relieved; another part dreaded the inevitable confrontation.
I squinted at the screen, expecting another passive-aggressive text from Ryan. Instead, an unfamiliar number displayed a message that made my heart skip.
*Grace? It's Nathan Cole. I noticed your status change on social media. I'm so sorry about everything. If you need someone to talk to, I'm here.*
Nathan Cole. The name transported me back to Berkeley—to laughter in coffee shops and late-night study sessions before Ryan had systematically removed him from my life, claiming Nathan's friendship was "inappropriate."
My fingers hovered over the screen. After years of isolation, reaching out felt dangerous, as if Ryan might materialize and snatch the phone from my hands. But Ryan wasn't here, and I was no longer his to control.
*Nathan. It's been a long time. Thank you for reaching out.*
His response came quickly: *Would you want to meet for coffee? No pressure, just to catch up. There's a place near your old Berkeley spot that's still around.*
I hesitated, anxiety and hope battling within me. Finally, I typed: *I'd like that. Tomorrow at 2?*
The café was smaller than I remembered, but the scent of freshly ground coffee beans and baked goods remained the same. I arrived early, choosing a corner table with a clear view of the door. My hands trembled slightly as I arranged and rearranged the sugar packets.
"Grace?"
I looked up to see Nathan standing there, his familiar smile warming his eyes. He'd aged well—a few strands of silver at his temples, laugh lines deepening around his eyes. Unlike Ryan's calculated perfection, Nathan's appearance was comfortably lived-in.
"You look exactly the same," he said, sliding into the chair across from me.
I laughed, the sound surprising me with its genuineness. "Liar. I haven't slept properly in days."
"Still beautiful," he said simply, then immediately looked embarrassed. "I'm sorry—I didn't mean to make you uncomfortable."
"You didn't," I assured him, realizing it was true. With Ryan, compliments were currency, given when he wanted something. Nathan's felt like a gift without expectation.
We ordered coffee, and the conversation flowed more easily than I'd expected. I found myself telling him everything—the years of manipulation, Diana's constant presence, the baby locket, the miscarriage, Ryan's cruel accusations.
"I should have stayed in touch," Nathan said, his expression pained. "I knew something was wrong when he cut you off from everyone."
"It wasn't your fault," I said. "I let it happen. I believed him when he said I was overreacting, that I was too sensitive."
Nathan reached across the table, his hand covering mine briefly. "That's what abusers do, Grace. They make you doubt yourself until their reality becomes yours."
The simple validation brought tears to my eyes. I blinked them away, determined not to break down in public.
"What will you do now?" he asked gently.
"I need a job," I admitted. "I've been a corporate wife for so long, I'm not sure what I'm qualified for anymore."
Nathan's expression brightened. "You majored in marketing, right? My friend Olivia runs the marketing department at Horizon Media. They're looking for someone with fresh perspectives. I could put in a word?"
I stared at him, surprised by the offer and my own eagerness to accept it. "You'd do that?"
"Of course," he said, as if helping me rebuild my life was the most natural thing in the world.
Three days later, I sat across from Olivia Chen, her shrewd eyes assessing me as I explained my background and the gap in my employment history.
"Nathan speaks very highly of you," she said finally. "And frankly, I think your perspective as someone re-entering the workforce could be valuable. When can you start?"
The salary she offered was modest compared to what Ryan spent on a single weekend, but it was mine—earned by my skills, my mind, my effort. I accepted on the spot.
That evening, I called Nathan, my voice bubbling with an excitement I hadn't felt in years. "I got it! I start on Monday!"
"I knew you would," he said, his voice warm with genuine pleasure at my success. "We should celebrate."
As I agreed to meet him for dinner, my phone beeped with an incoming call. Ryan's name flashed on the screen, and my newfound joy faltered. After days of silence, he was finally ready to acknowledge the divorce papers. I let the call go to voicemail, choosing instead to focus on the first real step toward my new life.
But even as I prepared to meet Nathan, I couldn't shake the feeling that Ryan wouldn't let me go without a fight.
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