
After My Wife Left Me for a New Beginning
Chapter 3
I stumbled through the door of our apartment, my head pounding with each heartbeat. The oxygen deprivation from the flight had left me dizzy and disoriented, and now fever burned through my body like wildfire. My uniform clung to my sweat-soaked skin as I fumbled with the keys, nearly collapsing against the wall.
"Wade?" I called out weakly, hoping against hope that my husband might show some concern.
The living room lights flicked on, revealing Wade standing there with his arms crossed, his expression not of worry but irritation.
"Where have you been?" he demanded. "I've been calling you for hours."
"The flight..." I managed, pressing my palm against my forehead. "There was an incident. I had to file reports after we landed."
Wade's eyes narrowed. "Anya said you made a scene on the plane."
Of course. Anya. The woman he'd rushed to help while I struggled to breathe.
"I nearly passed out from oxygen deprivation," I whispered, leaning heavily against the doorframe. "I couldn't get my mask to work properly during the pressure drop."
"Always so dramatic," he scoffed, checking his watch. "Do you have any idea how this disrupts my schedule? Anya and I had plans tonight."
I stared at him, truly seeing him for the first time. This man—my husband—was genuinely annoyed that my medical emergency had inconvenienced his date with his mistress.
"I think I need to lie down," I said, my voice trembling as chills racked my body. "I have a fever."
Wade rolled his eyes. "Now you're sick too? Perfect timing, Diana. Just perfect."
I didn't have the strength to argue. I dragged myself toward our bedroom, each step requiring monumental effort.
"Don't expect me to play nurse," Wade called after me. "I promised Anya I'd be there for her tonight. She's still shaken from the turbulence."
I paused at the bedroom door, turning to look at him one last time. "She had her oxygen mask. I didn't."
"There you go again, making everything about you," he snapped, grabbing his keys from the counter. "This attention-seeking behavior is getting old, Diana."
The door slammed behind him, leaving me alone with my fever and the crushing weight of reality. My husband had just abandoned me—sick, possibly in need of medical attention—to comfort the woman he really loved.
I collapsed onto our bed, too exhausted to even cry. The room spun around me as fever dreams took hold, blurring the line between consciousness and delirium. In my haze, I saw my mother's face, heard her voice urging me to be strong, to find my own path.
"I can't," I whispered to the empty room. "I'm trapped."
But somewhere in the burning depths of fever, clarity emerged like a cool spring in the desert. This wasn't a life—it was a sentence. And no business arrangement, no family obligation was worth this slow death of my spirit.
When morning came, I was still alone. Wade hadn't returned, hadn't even called to check if I was alive or dead. My fever had broken sometime in the night, leaving me weak but clear-headed. I reached for my laptop with shaking hands, driven by a purpose that had crystallized during those long, feverish hours.
I typed "Seattle Research Institute" into the search bar. My mother had often spoken of colleagues there, scientists continuing the environmental research she had been passionate about before her death. For years, I'd secretly followed their publications, reading scientific journals that Wade dismissed as "boring nonsense."
Their website showed current projects, staff profiles, and—there it was—a careers page with open positions. They were seeking researchers with backgrounds similar to what I might have pursued if my father hadn't pushed me into the corporate world after my mother died.
My fingers hovered over the keyboard as a wild, desperate plan formed in my mind. What if I could disappear? Become someone new—someone free?
I created a new email address using my mother's maiden name: Thompson. Cora Thompson. The name felt right, like a door opening to a different life.
With feverish intensity, I crafted a résumé for Cora, building on the scientific knowledge I'd accumulated in secret over years of self-study. I exaggerated some credentials, invented others, all while incorporating genuine insights about my mother's research methodologies that only someone intimately familiar with her work would know.
Three days later, an email appeared in Cora Thompson's inbox. Dr. Margaret Chen, Director of Environmental Studies at the Seattle Research Institute, wanted to schedule a video interview.
My hand instinctively went to my mother's locket as I read the message. For the first time in years, I felt something that had long been foreign to me: hope.
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