
After My Wife Left Me for a New Beginning
Chapter 2
The weeks following my discovery of Wade and Anya's affair were a special kind of hell. Every day I walked into that office with my head held high, pretending I didn't notice the whispers or the pitying glances from colleagues who had figured out what was happening. Sarah Mitchell, my closest colleague, had taken to bringing me coffee in the mornings—a small gesture of solidarity that meant more than she knew.
Today was the annual medical examination, mandatory for all flight crew. I stood in line outside the medical office, reviewing my checklist when I felt someone brush against my shoulder.
"Ready for your exam, Diana?" Anya's voice dripped with false sweetness. "I hear Dr. Reynolds is particularly thorough with vision tests this year."
I clutched my mother's locket, steadying myself. "I'm not concerned. My vision is perfect."
"We'll see," she said with a smile that didn't reach her eyes, before sauntering away.
When my turn came, everything proceeded normally until the vision test. Dr. Reynolds frowned as I struggled to identify letters that seemed blurry and distorted on the screen.
"Mrs. Morrison, I'm seeing some concerning results here," he said, making notes on his clipboard.
"That can't be right," I insisted, blinking rapidly. "I've never had vision problems."
The door opened, and Wade walked in with Anya right behind him. My stomach dropped. They weren't scheduled for exams until later.
"Dr. Reynolds, I'm here as a department supervisor to witness the examination results," Wade announced formally, as if we weren't married, as if he hadn't kissed me goodbye that morning before leaving for work.
I tried again with the vision test, but the letters remained indecipherable. "There must be something wrong with the equipment," I said, my voice rising slightly. "This doesn't make sense."
Anya stepped forward, her face a mask of concern. "Dr. Reynolds, are you suggesting Diana has been flying with impaired vision? That's a serious safety violation."
"I don't have impaired vision!" I protested.
Wade frowned, not at Anya's interference, but at me. "Diana, are you trying to cover up a medical issue? Do you understand the implications for passenger safety?"
The room seemed to close in around me. My husband—the man who had seen me read fine print without glasses just that morning—was publicly questioning my integrity.
"I would never compromise safety," I said quietly, my eyes locked with his, searching for any sign of the man I thought I'd married. There was nothing there but cold professionalism.
Dr. Reynolds cleared his throat. "I'll need to file a report and recommend temporary grounding until further testing."
Wade nodded gravely. "Of course. Safety protocols must be followed."
As I left the office, my professional reputation in tatters, I caught Anya's satisfied smirk reflected in the glass door.
---
Two days later, Sarah cornered me in the empty break room.
"I know what Anya did," she whispered, glancing over her shoulder. "I was helping Dr. Reynolds organize his equipment after hours and found evidence the vision testing machine had been tampered with before your exam. The calibration was completely off."
Hope flared briefly. "You saw this? You'd testify?"
Sarah nodded. "I'll back you up. We can file a formal complaint against Anya."
I sank into a chair, reality crashing down. Filing a complaint would mean a public investigation. It would expose my marriage to Wade, reveal the business arrangement between our families, potentially unraveling years of corporate alliances worth millions.
"I can't," I whispered, touching my locket. "There's too much at stake."
"Diana, she's destroying your career!"
"I know." I swallowed hard. "But some things are more complicated than they appear."
Sarah squeezed my hand. "This isn't right."
"Very little is right in my life these days," I admitted.
---
A week later, I was back on limited duty during a flight to Chicago when severe turbulence hit. The cabin pressure alarm blared as oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling. I helped elderly passengers secure their masks while fighting to maintain my balance against the violently shaking aircraft.
Somehow, in the chaos, my own mask had become tangled. As I struggled to straighten it, dizziness swept over me. Through darkening vision, I saw Wade rushing not toward me but to Anya, who was dramatically gasping despite having her mask properly in place.
He knelt beside her, his hands tenderly cupping her face, whispering reassurances as he adjusted her already-functioning mask. Meanwhile, I fumbled with my tangled line, each breath becoming more difficult, my lungs burning for oxygen.
As darkness crept into the edges of my vision, a single crystalline thought formed: Wade would literally let me die for her.
I collapsed against the cabin wall, still conscious enough to see my husband cradling his mistress while his wife suffocated mere feet away.
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