
Betrayal and Rebirth: My Divorce Choice
Betrayal and Rebirth: My Divorce Choice Chapter 1
The grandfather clock in the corner ticked once, twice. I counted the third tick before Joey finished speaking.
"Nina, apologize to Amy. Right now. Thank her for not holding a grudge against you all these years."
His voice carried the flat finality he used when reviewing quarterly numbers. My husband had a CFO's voice even at home.
I looked down at my hands. The wedding band on my left ring finger had worn a faint groove into the skin beneath it. Six years of wearing the same gold.
"And after the baby is born," he continued, "Amy will raise it. You'll focus on taking care of her. Her health hasn't been good."
The leather sofa creaked under Amy. She sat with her ankles crossed, knees pressed together like a schoolgirl waiting for a grade.
"Joey." Her voice came out small. "I told you not to push her like this—"
"Last thing." He stepped past her and laid a folder on the glass coffee table. "Sign the divorce papers, Nina. Amy is the woman I was supposed to marry from the beginning."
The folder was navy blue. Embossed gold corners. The kind a corporate lawyer hands you when the decision has already been finalized in another room.
My stomach turned over once, slow and complete, the way a fish turns belly-up in still water. The taste in my mouth went metallic. The back of my knees locked to keep me upright. Somewhere above my collarbone, a thin high sound started — not a ringing, more like a wire stretched too tight. The room held still. The chandelier above us did not shake. The clock did not stop.
Three months ago I had told Joey I was pregnant. He had kissed my forehead and said "good." That single word. Good.
Two weeks ago a doctor had said two words to me, in a tone she clearly used a lot. *Stage three.*
Today my husband was telling me to hand my baby over to his mistress and disappear into a hospital ward as her nursemaid.
I didn't cry. Crying would have used muscle I didn't have. My handbag pressed against my hip, and inside it the manila envelope from the oncology clinic crinkled when my elbow shifted. I felt that crinkle the way you feel a stranger's hand on the small of your back in a crowd. Sharp. Specific. Mine.
Joey was watching me. Waiting for the scream.
I gave him a small, even nod.
"Okay," I said.
His chin lifted half an inch. Not the reaction he had rehearsed for.
I turned to Amy. Her lips were already parted around whatever soft thing she had been preparing to say. Up close she had the kind of face people wrote songs about — pale, slightly hollow at the temples, eyes that always looked like they had just stopped being wet.
"Amy," I said. "I'm sorry."
"Nina, I—"
"I'm sorry I stood between you and Joey for six years." I made sure my voice did not crack. "I should have understood sooner."
Her hand flew up to cover her mouth. Above her fingers, her eyes went wide and stayed wide a beat too long. Shock — real shock, the kind a person can't fake, because the pupils do it on their own. Then she smoothed her face back down.
"Nina." She lowered her hand. "Of course I forgive you. I never blamed you. I knew you didn't know."
There it was. *I knew you didn't know.* As if my last six years had been a clerical error she was magnanimously erasing. I filed the sentence away. I would think about it later, when I had the energy to be angry.
Joey cleared his throat. "Nina. Are you feeling alright?"
He almost sounded concerned. Twenty years from now I might still hear that exact tone in my sleep — the way concern can be used as a probe.
"I'm fine." I sat on the edge of the armchair across from them. The leather was cold through the back of my dress. "About the baby."
"Yes?" Amy leaned forward.
"I won't have it."
The room went quiet in the specific way rooms go quiet when two people have a script and the third person tears it in half.
"Nina, we agreed—" Joey started.
"You agreed Amy would raise it," I said. "I didn't. The pregnancy ends. That's cleaner for everyone."
I watched Amy's face. The shock came back — quicker this time, sharper — and underneath it, for half a second, something that looked exactly like disappointment. She covered it with worry.
"Are you sure?" she whispered. "Joey, the baby is yours, you should—"
"It's my body." I picked up the pen from the coffee table. Joey's pen. The Montblanc I had given him on his thirty-second birthday. The barrel was warm from his hand. "And my decision."
I uncapped it.
The divorce papers had been tabbed in three places with little pink flags. Someone — not Joey, he never did his own filing — had walked into a stationery aisle and picked pink for this. I signed the first flag. *Nina*. Then the surname I would not be using much longer. *Halloran*.
The second flag. Then the third.
My hand did not shake. I noticed that the way you notice a small miracle. The wire-thin sound behind my ear had not stopped, but it had quieted.
I capped the pen and set it down with the nib pointing toward Joey.
"Was there anything else?"
He stared at the signed pages as if he expected them to rearrange themselves. "That — that's it."
"Then I'll go."
I stood. My handbag swung against my hip and the envelope crinkled a second time. Joey's eyes flicked to the bag.
"What's in there?"
"Receipts." The lie came out clean and unhurried. "I stopped at the dry cleaner."
He nodded, already losing interest, already turning back to Amy with a hand on the small of her back. He had the faintly stunned air of a man who had been bracing his shoulder against a door that turned out to be unlocked.
Amy stood too. "Nina, you don't have to leave right now. Stay for tea. Please. Joey didn't mean to be so cold about—"
"Amy." I gave her my warmest smile. It hurt the muscles in my cheeks. "He meant every word. And so did I. Take care of him."
I held her gaze one second longer than was comfortable. She broke first.
I walked to the front hall. I did not look at the wedding photo on the console table. I did not look at the umbrella stand where Joey's golf umbrella had lived for four years. I opened the door, stepped onto the front step, and let it click shut behind me.
In the driveway, alone, I leaned against the side of my car and breathed in for the first time in what felt like an hour. My ribs hurt. My legs went soft and I caught the door handle to keep from sliding down.
I unzipped the handbag.
The manila envelope was bent at one corner from where it had pressed against the hinge. I drew it out with two fingers. The clinic's logo sat in the upper left, two interlocking circles in pale blue. Beneath it, through the thin paper of the report inside, the words showed in faded printer ink, just legible where the envelope had been folded —
*Carcinoma. Stage —*
The rest sat behind the crease.
My phone lit up in my palm before I could open the flap. A new message. Joey's name across the screen.
*Send me the address of your obstetrician. Amy and I would like to be there for the procedure. It would mean a lot to her.*
I read it twice. The third time, the letters stopped meaning anything.
I slid the envelope back into the bag and zipped it shut. The little metal pull caught the edge of the report, and through the canvas I could feel that one folded corner press against my hip like a second heartbeat — the one Joey did not know I had, the one Amy could not forgive me for, the one that was going to outlive this marriage by exactly as long as it needed to.
I got in the car. I put the key in the ignition. I did not turn it.
Through the windshield, the front door of the house opened again. Joey stepped out onto the porch with his phone to his ear, looking straight at me, and lifted one hand in a small wave — the same wave he gave the valet.
He had not sent the message himself.
Amy had.
Betrayal and Rebirth: My Divorce Choice of Contents
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