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After My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Saving Me Novel Cover

After My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Saving Me

It was a Tuesday night when my twelve-year love story came to a dead stop. I came home late to our Upper East Side apartment. The place was quiet. I took off my heels in the hallway so I wouldn’t wake Julien. I pushed open our bedroom door. The room was dark, but the streetlights filtered through the blinds. Julien was asleep. But he wasn’t alone. There was a woman beside him. Elyse Chavez.
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Chapter 1

It was a Tuesday night when my twelve-year love story came to a dead stop. I came home late to our Upper East Side apartment. The place was quiet. I took off my heels in the hallway so I wouldn’t wake Julien. I pushed open our bedroom door.

The room was dark, but the streetlights filtered through the blinds. Julien was asleep. But he wasn’t alone.

There was a woman beside him. Elyse Chavez. Her blonde hair was splayed across my pillow. The same pillowcase I washed and ironed that very morning. Her bare shoulder was pressed against Julien’s chest. His arm was wrapped heavily around her waist.

I didn’t scream. I didn’t drop my purse. I just stood there in the doorway. Something inside my chest snapped, and then everything went completely cold. I stared at them until the image burned into my brain. I wanted to remember exactly what my devotion bought me. Then, I stepped back and pulled the door shut with a soft click.

I walked to the kitchen. The marble floor was freezing under my bare feet. I turned on the small pendant light over the island. I found a yellow notepad and a pen in a drawer. I wrote four words in neat, steady letters:

*I want a divorce.*

I tore the page off and left it next to the coffee maker. He would see it first thing in the morning.

I went to the hall closet and pulled out my black suitcase. I moved through the apartment like a ghost. I packed my clothes, my shoes, my toiletries. I didn’t take anything he bought me. I didn't cry. The tears simply weren't there. I had spent twelve years loving this man. I had cooked his meals, managed his schedule, and made myself small so he could take up all the space. And this was my reward.

Before I left, I went back to the bedroom. I stood at the foot of the bed. I gently pulled the edge of the duvet up so it wouldn't drag on the floor. A habit I couldn't break. Then I walked out. By dawn, I was in a cab heading downtown. I carried fourteen years of my life in a single bag.

Three days later, we met at the Manhattan City Clerk’s office. The air inside smelled like floor wax and old paper. Julien stood by the elevators. He wore a tailored charcoal suit. He looked perfectly composed, like he was here for a board meeting.

“You're making a mistake, Kiara,” he said quietly as I walked up.

I looked at him. “Am I?”

His jaw tightened. “It meant nothing. You're being impulsive. We can fix this.”

“There is nothing to fix,” I said flatly. “You made your choice. You made it in my bed.”

He frowned. He wasn't used to me talking back. He was used to my endless patience. “You're throwing away twelve years over one night.”

“No, Julien,” I replied. “You threw it away. I'm just cleaning up the mess.”

He didn’t argue anymore. His pride wouldn't let him beg. We walked to the counter. We signed the papers. The clerk stamped them with a loud thud. It was over. We walked out onto the courthouse steps. The wind bit at my cheeks.

“Take care of yourself,” he said stiffly.

He didn't reach out to touch me. I didn't look back. I slipped the folded divorce decree into my purse. It felt heavy, like a stone pressing against my ribs. I walked down the steps and disappeared into the crowd.

That same afternoon, my phone rang. It was a nurse from Mount Sinai Hospital. My mother, Madeline, had collapsed at home.

I froze. I ran to the subway and rushed to the hospital. The ER was bright and chaotic. The smell of bleach and rubbing alcohol stung my nose. I found my mother in a private room. She looked pale and fragile against the white sheets. The doctor said it was a severe stress-induced heart episode. She needed absolute rest. Any sudden shock could trigger another attack.

I sat by her bed and held her hand. “I'm right here, Mom,” I whispered.

Then the door opened. Julien walked in.

He held a bouquet of pink peonies. My mother's favorite flowers. He walked right past me, completely ignoring my presence. He went to the other side of the bed and gently took her free hand.

“Madeline,” he said. His voice was thick with practiced warmth. “I came as soon as I heard. How are you feeling?”

My mother smiled weakly. Her eyes watered. “Oh, Julien. You didn't have to leave work for me.”

“Of course I did,” he said smoothly. “You're family.”

I stared at him. The blood pounded in my ears. My knuckles turned white as I gripped the edge of the mattress. The divorce papers were sitting in my purse, just inches from his leg. He looked up and met my eyes across the bed. It was a silent challenge. He knew I wouldn't cause a scene. He knew I couldn't tell her the truth. Not now. Not when her heart monitor was beeping steadily in the background.

“Thank you, Julien,” my mother whispered. She looked at me. “You take such good care of my Kiara.”

I swallowed the bile rising in my throat. I forced my mouth into a thin smile. “He does, Mom.”

The lie tasted like ash. Julien's eyes gleamed with quiet victory. The trap snapped shut around me.

Julien finally left at midnight. He patted my shoulder in front of the night nurse. I flinched, but he was already walking out the door.

I left my mother sleeping and went to the waiting room. I sat down on a hard plastic chair. The fluorescent lights hummed above me. I held a paper cup of cold, bitter coffee. The hallway was completely dead.

I unzipped my purse and pulled out my small notebook. I flipped past grocery lists and old dry-cleaning reminders. I found a blank page. I thought about a Japanese movie I loved. The one I begged Julien to watch with me for years, the one he always said was too boring. I clicked my pen and wrote down a single line:

*I am fine. How are you?*

I stared at the words until they blurred. I closed the notebook and set it on the empty chair next to me. I reached up and tucked a loose strand of hair behind my left ear. I looked at the blank white wall across the room.

For twelve years, my entire life was mapped out. Every decision I made circled around Julien. What he wanted to eat, where he wanted to go, who he wanted me to be. Now, I had a suitcase sitting in a locker at Penn Station. I had a signed divorce decree in my bag. And I had a mother who thought I was happily married to a man who broke my heart.

I took a slow, shaky breath. For the first time in my life, I had absolutely no idea what to do next.

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