
After My Husband’s Mistress Shot Me on a Rooftop
Chapter 2
The fluorescent lights of the police station buzzed like angry wasps. I leaned against the counter, my broken leg throbbing with each heartbeat, water from my soaked clothes pooling on the linoleum beneath me. The officer behind the desk—a middle-aged man with a coffee stain on his uniform—looked at me the way people look at roadkill: with mild disgust and the desire to be anywhere else.
"Let me get this straight," he said, not bothering to hide his yawn. "Your boyfriend—who you claim defrauded you—is Edward Payne? Of Payne Industries?"
"Yes." My voice cracked. "He made me believe he was bankrupt. I gave him everything. Seven years of—"
"Ma'am." The officer held up a hand, his wedding ring catching the harsh light. "Mr. Payne called about an hour ago. Said his ex-girlfriend might come in here making wild accusations. Said you've been... unstable since the breakup."
The floor seemed to drop out from under me. "He called ahead?"
"Look, lady." The officer leaned forward, his breath reeking of stale coffee and cigarettes. "This sounds like a domestic situation. Lovers' quarrel. Not a criminal matter. My advice? Move on. Find a therapist. Maybe some medication."
He slid a pamphlet across the counter. *Mental Health Resources for Women in Crisis.*
I stared at it, the words blurring through my tears. Edward had already poisoned this well. He'd anticipated every move, sealed every exit. The system wasn't broken—it had been bought.
I turned and limped out, each step sending lightning bolts of pain up my spine. Behind me, I heard the officer pick up his phone. "Yeah, she just left. No, no report filed. You're welcome, Mr. Payne."
The rain had stopped, but the night air was cold enough to bite. I stood on the station steps, shivering, my mother's voice echoing in my head from years ago: *When the whole world turns its back, you save yourself.*
---
My basement apartment smelled worse than I remembered—mildew mixed with the sour tang of rotting vegetables I'd salvaged from dumpsters. The single bulb overhead flickered, casting manic shadows on the water-stained walls.
I didn't pack. There was nothing here worth taking except the lie I'd been living.
I pulled my mother's photograph from the drawer—her smile frozen in a moment before the world had taught me that love could be a weapon. I tucked it into my jacket pocket, next to my ID. Then I found the coat I'd bought at a thrift store three years ago, the one with the torn lining I'd hand-stitched back together.
Inside that lining was eight hundred dollars in cash. Emergency money I'd hidden from myself, from Edward, from the crushing weight of his imaginary debt. My fingers trembled as I counted it. It wasn't much. But it was mine.
I took my phone and removed the SIM card, snapping it in half with a satisfying crack. No more tracking. No more leash.
The bus station was six blocks away. I made it four blocks before I heard the purr of an expensive engine behind me. My blood turned to ice.
Edward's black Mercedes slid to a stop at the curb near my building. Through the tinted window, I saw his silhouette—lean, predatory, scanning the street.
I pressed myself into the shadow of a closed storefront, my broken leg screaming in protest, my hand clamped over my mouth to muffle my breathing. He sat there for five minutes that felt like five hours. Then the car door opened.
"Catherine!" His voice echoed down the empty street, smooth and venomous. "I know you're here. We need to talk. I may have been... harsh earlier."
Harsh. The word was a joke, an insult to the seven years he'd stolen.
I waited until he disappeared into my building before I ran—if my limping, gasping flight could be called running. The bus station glowed ahead like a lighthouse in a storm.
---
The new city smelled different. Less like ambition and more like survival. I spent three days in a youth hostel, rationing my cash, applying to every job listing I could find on public library computers. No one wanted a woman with a seven-year gap in her resume and no references.
On the fourth day, sitting in the library's fluorescent glow, I remembered the email. It had arrived five years ago, buried in my inbox like a time capsule from a different life.
*Harrison Corporation seeks talented candidates for international market analysis. Your academic record suggests you'd be an excellent fit.*
I had deleted it. Edward had convinced me I wasn't smart enough, that I'd embarrass myself, that I was lucky to have him.
My hands shook as I typed the recruiter's name into the search bar. The company website loaded—sleek, professional, real. I crafted a reply, my fingers hovering over the send button.
*I apologize for the delayed response. If the position is still available, I would be grateful for the opportunity to interview.*
I hit send and closed my eyes, waiting for nothing.
The response came in four minutes.
*Catherine, we've been hoping to hear from you. Are you available for a video interview tomorrow at 10 AM?*
I read it three times, certain it was a mistake, a cruel joke, another trap.
But the signature at the bottom made my breath catch: *Harrison Ford, Senior VP of Acquisitions.*
A name I knew. A face I remembered from college—kind eyes, a quiet smile, the senior who'd helped me with calculus and never asked for anything in return.
For the first time in seven years, I felt something besides pain.
I felt a ember of hope, small and fragile, beginning to glow in the ashes of my life.
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