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After My Miscarriage, He Married His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Miscarriage, He Married His Mistress

I sat in the plush leather chair of Sean's law office, my body still aching from the miscarriage three days ago. The cramping hadn't stopped completely. Neither had the bleeding. The doctor had advised bed rest, but Sean's lawyer had made it clear—today was non-negotiable. "Mrs. Harrington, please sign here... and here." The lawyer's voice was clinically detached as he slid the divorce papers across the polished mahogany table. His finger tapped impatiently at each yellow tab. I couldn't look at Sean. In the ten years we'd been married, I'd memorized every expression that crossed his face.
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Chapter 1

I sat in the plush leather chair of Sean's law office, my body still aching from the miscarriage three days ago. The cramping hadn't stopped completely. Neither had the bleeding. The doctor had advised bed rest, but Sean's lawyer had made it clear—today was non-negotiable.

"Mrs. Harrington, please sign here... and here." The lawyer's voice was clinically detached as he slid the divorce papers across the polished mahogany table. His finger tapped impatiently at each yellow tab.

I couldn't look at Sean. In the ten years we'd been married, I'd memorized every expression that crossed his face. Today, I couldn't bear to see which one he wore—contempt, perhaps, or worse, nothing at all.

Instead, my gaze drifted to Natalie Benson, perched beside him like a bird of prey. Her red-lacquered nails rested possessively on his forearm, her diamond bracelet catching the light. My bracelet. The one Sean had given me on our fifth anniversary.

"June." Sean's voice finally broke the silence. Cold. Distant. A stranger's voice. "The sooner you sign, the sooner we can all move on."

The lawyer cleared his throat. "I should remind you, Mrs. Harrington, that should you choose not to sign today, Mr. Harrington is prepared to contest any custody arrangements for future children and—"

"Future children?" The words escaped me before I could stop them. My hand instinctively went to my abdomen, still tender from the loss. "I just lost our baby."

Natalie's lips curled into a smile that never reached her eyes. "Well, that simplifies things, doesn't it?"

Sean didn't even flinch at her cruelty. He just stared at his watch, as if my grief were an inconvenience, a meeting running overtime.

"Sign the papers, June," he said flatly. "Or you'll leave with nothing."

My hands trembled as I picked up the pen. Each signature felt like another piece of myself being carved away. With the final stroke, ten years of marriage—of loving Sean, of building a life with him, of sacrificing everything I'd ever wanted—was reduced to a stack of legal documents.

The drive back to our apartment—no, Sean's apartment now—was a blur of rain-slicked streets and blurry traffic lights. My chest felt hollow, as if something vital had been scooped out.

When I reached the door, my key still worked. Small mercies.

But inside, everything had changed.

The closet in our bedroom stood open, emptied of my clothes. The bookshelves had been purged of my novels and textbooks. Even the photographs had been removed from their frames, leaving ghostly rectangles on the walls where our memories had once hung.

In the living room, cardboard boxes were stacked neatly, labeled in a handwriting I didn't recognize. "June's Things." "Kitchen—June's." "Miscellaneous."

A note sat on the kitchen counter, Sean's precise handwriting unmistakable:

*June,

The movers will collect these boxes tomorrow. You have until noon to vacate the premises. Your access to our joint accounts has been temporarily suspended pending the finalization of our divorce.

—Sean*

No goodbye. No acknowledgment of our decade together. Just logistics.

A soft knock at the door startled me. When I opened it, Mrs. Chen from across the hall stood there, her kind face creased with concern.

"I saw the movers earlier," she said softly. "They left these by the door." She held out a pair of worn ballet flats—my favorite shoes for padding around the apartment on Sunday mornings.

That night, I sat on the bathroom floor, the cool tiles pressing against my legs. The bottle of sleeping pills Sean had gotten prescribed for his insomnia sat in my palm. How many would it take? Would it hurt?

"June?"

The voice was so achingly familiar that for a moment, I thought I'd imagined it. But when I looked up, he was there in the doorway—Sean. Not the Sean who had sat across from me in that sterile law office, but Sean as he had been when we first met. Eighteen years old, with warm eyes that crinkled at the corners when he smiled. Hair slightly too long, falling across his forehead in that way that had made my heart stumble the first time I saw him.

"Sean?" My voice cracked.

He knelt beside me, and when his hand touched mine, it was warm but somehow not quite solid—like touching sunlight through a window.

"What are you doing?" he asked gently, his eyes fixed on the pill bottle in my hand.

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