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After My Husband Missed Our Anniversary Dinner Forever Novel Cover

After My Husband Missed Our Anniversary Dinner Forever

The alarm never rang. I'd been awake since four, watching the darkness fade into a pale gray dawn through our bedroom curtains. Michael's side of the bed remained untouched, the sheets still crisp from yesterday's making. Not unusual—he often worked late. But today was different. Today marked thirty years. I slipped from bed and padded to the closet, my fingers finding the emerald-green dress I'd hidden behind my winter coats. The saleswoman at Nordstrom had assured me it took ten years off, though I wasn't sure I believed her. Still, Michael had always loved me in green. Said it brought out the gold flecks in my brown eyes.
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Chapter 2

The house felt different when Michael finally came home. His footsteps on the hardwood floor carried a weight I'd never noticed before, or maybe I'd just never listened. I sat at the kitchen table, still in yesterday's clothes, my hands wrapped around a cold cup of coffee.

"Eleanor." He stood in the doorway, his suit immaculate despite the late hour. No apology in his voice. No explanation. Just my name, flat and businesslike.

"Thirty years," I said, not looking up. "I waited until midnight."

He moved into the room, pulling out his usual chair with practiced ease. The mahogany table between us suddenly seemed vast, an ocean of polished wood that had witnessed countless family dinners, homework sessions, birthday celebrations. Now it would witness this.

"Victoria called you." Not a question. He loosened his tie with one hand, a gesture I'd found charming once. "I told her to wait."

"Wait?" The word came out sharp, surprising us both. "Wait for what, Michael? For you to find the right moment to tell me about your eighteen-year-old daughter? About your other life?"

His jaw tightened. "It's not what you think."

"Then explain it to me." I finally looked at him, really looked. The silver at his temples, the lines around his eyes—when had we gotten so old? "Explain how you've had another family for almost two decades. Explain why you were with her on our anniversary."

Michael's hand moved to his wedding ring, twisting it slowly. The motion hypnotized me—around and around, the gold catching the kitchen light. Then, with deliberate precision, he slid it off his finger and placed it on the table between us.

The small clink of metal on wood echoed like a gunshot.

"Victoria's pregnant," he said, his voice steady, reasonable. As if we were discussing quarterly reports. "She needs me now more than you do. You have to understand, Eleanor—we've had thirty good years. But passion fades. What we have now is... comfortable. Nostalgic."

Nostalgia. He'd reduced three decades of my life to nostalgia.

"I gave up everything for you." The words came out quiet, almost wondering. "My family. My art. My—"

"And I'm grateful." He leaned back, crossing his arms. "But Victoria brings something different to my life. Energy. Excitement. She understands the man I've become, not the boy you married."

"The man you've become." I studied this stranger wearing my husband's face. "You mean a liar? An adulterer?"

"Don't be dramatic." His tone sharpened, the CEO voice he used to intimidate business rivals. "I'm trying to be honest with you. Victoria and I—we have a life together. A daughter who needs her father. Another child on the way. I can't just abandon them."

"But you can abandon me."

"I'm not abandoning anyone. I'm suggesting we come to an arrangement. Something civilized. You keep the house, your position. I split my time. Everyone's taken care of."

I stared at the ring on the table. Such a small thing to represent so much. All those years of forgiveness, of looking the other way, of believing that love meant endurance. My mother's voice echoed across the decades: "Men like him take and take until there's nothing left."

"Get out." The words surprised me with their calm certainty.

Michael blinked. "Eleanor—"

"Get out of my house."

"Our house," he corrected, standing. "And I'll be back tomorrow to discuss this rationally. When you've had time to process."

He left the ring on the table.

After the door closed, I sat in the silence, staring at that circle of gold. Thirty years reduced to an abandoned ring and the word 'nostalgia.' My hands shook as I reached for my phone, scrolling through contacts until I found the name I needed.

Sarah Jenkins answered on the second ring. "Eleanor? It's late, is everything—"

"I need a divorce lawyer." The words came out steady, surprising me. "Can you help me?"

A pause. Then, gentle but firm: "Oh, honey. Of course. But Eleanor... are you ready for what's coming? Michael won't make this easy."

I picked up his ring, feeling its weight. "I've been getting ready for thirty years, Sarah. I just didn't know it."

As we talked through the basics—documents I'd need, accounts to secure, what to expect—I turned the ring over in my fingers. Tomorrow, Michael would return, expecting to find the same compliant wife he'd left. He had no idea that woman had died somewhere between the abandoned anniversary dinner and the ring on the table.

But first, I had another call to make. My son needed to know. And I needed to know whose side he'd choose.

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