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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 3

I stared at the ceiling of Chris's spare bedroom, watching the shadows from passing cars slide across the cracked plaster. The mattress smelled faintly of mothballs and something else—a lingering scent of my brother's military life, perhaps. After the parking garage confrontation with Sean, I'd had nowhere else to go. My credit cards were maxed out, my accounts emptied, and my name was now attached to debts I hadn't even known existed.

"You can stay as long as you need," Chris had said when I showed up at his door, suitcase in hand, eyes swollen from crying. His apartment was small—a one-bedroom converted to two by adding a wall that didn't quite reach the ceiling—but it was clean and warm. Military precision evident in the perfectly made bed, the precisely aligned shoes by the door.

I rolled onto my side, wincing at the hollow ache that still lingered in my abdomen. The physical reminder of everything I'd lost.

"Hey, you up?" Chris's voice came softly through the thin door. When I didn't answer, he pushed it open anyway, his wheelchair barely fitting through the narrow frame. "Brought you something."

He wheeled over to the bed and handed me a battered leather journal. The cover was worn smooth at the corners, the pages yellowed with age.

"What's this?" I asked, running my fingers over the soft leather.

"My therapist gave it to me when I came back from Afghanistan. Said writing down the next steps, no matter how small, helped make the impossible seem possible." His eyes, so like mine, held no pity—just quiet understanding. "Thought you might need it more than I do now."

I clutched the journal to my chest, tears threatening again. "I don't know what the next steps even are, Chris."

He gestured to the wall behind me, where his service medals hung in a simple frame. "When they first put me in this chair, I couldn't see past the next hour, let alone the next day. But you keep going. One step, then another."

He reached out and squeezed my hand. "You'll rebuild, June. And I'll help you."

---

The nonprofit where I'd worked before my marriage to Sean was housed in a converted Victorian in Capitol Hill. I'd spent three happy years there before leaving to support Sean's career move to New York. Now, back in Seattle with nothing but desperation, I hoped they might remember me fondly.

"June Parker!" Maria Sanchez exclaimed when I walked into her office. "Or is it Harrington now?"

"Parker," I said firmly. "It's Parker again."

Maria's warm brown eyes softened with understanding. She'd been my supervisor years ago, and time had added silver to her dark hair but hadn't diminished her kind smile.

"Well, Ms. Parker, your timing is impeccable. We just got funding for a new community outreach position. The pay isn't spectacular, but—"

"I'll take it," I interrupted, then flushed. "I mean, I'd like to apply. If that's possible."

She laughed. "Let's start with an interview, at least. How's tomorrow?"

I left feeling lighter than I had in weeks. The next day, I wore my only remaining professional outfit—a navy skirt suit I'd managed to grab before the movers came—and answered Maria's questions with growing confidence. By the end, her smile told me everything I needed to know.

"We'll be in touch very soon," she promised, walking me to the door.

Three days later, a terse email arrived:

*Dear Ms. Parker,*

*Thank you for your interest in our Community Outreach Coordinator position. After careful consideration, we have decided to pursue other candidates whose qualifications better align with our current needs.*

*We wish you the best in your future endeavors.*

I stared at my phone in disbelief. The interview had gone perfectly. Maria had all but offered me the job on the spot.

Before I could stop myself, I was dialing her number.

"June," Maria answered, her voice tight. "I was hoping you'd call."

"What happened?" I asked, struggling to keep my voice steady.

A long pause. Then: "I shouldn't be telling you this, but... Natalie Benson called our executive director yesterday. Sean's firm is our biggest donor, and she made it clear that if we hired you, they would withdraw their support."

The phone nearly slipped from my suddenly numb fingers. "She did what?"

"I'm so sorry, June. We can't lose that funding—we'd have to close our doors."

After we hung up, I sat on Chris's fire escape, watching the sun sink behind the Seattle skyline. The metal was cold through my thin pants, but I barely noticed. First my marriage, then my home, my financial security, and now even the chance to work—all systematically stripped away.

"Beautiful, isn't it?"

I turned to find young Sean sitting beside me, his legs dangling over the edge of the fire escape. In the fading light, he looked almost solid.

"Do you remember our first date?" he asked, his eyes reflecting the deepening twilight.

"The coffee shop near campus," I whispered. "You spilled your latte all over my economics textbook."

He smiled, and suddenly I wasn't on the fire escape anymore but sitting in that crowded university café, watching eighteen-year-old Sean frantically blot at my ruined book with napkins, his face flushed with embarrassment.

"I'll buy you a new one," he was promising, his eyes—so warm then, so full of life—meeting mine across the table.

The memory shifted, and we were dancing in the spring rain on the empty quad, my sundress plastered to my skin, his laughter echoing across the deserted campus.

Then we were lying on a blanket in the darkness outside Madison, watching the Perseid meteor shower streak across the summer sky. "Someday," he whispered, taking my hand, "I'm going to give you the world, June Parker."

The memories faded, leaving me alone on the cold fire escape, tears streaming down my face. The contrast between those cherished moments and my current reality was almost too painful to bear.

"Why are you showing me this?" I asked the empty air where young Sean had been.

But there was no answer, only the distant sound of traffic and the hollow ache of everything I'd lost.

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