
Betrayal's Final Chapter: Rediscovering Life After His Affair
Chapter 3
The coffee shop on Fifth Street buzzed with the familiar rhythm of morning rush hour, but I barely noticed the chaos around me. My hands wrapped around the ceramic mug, drawing warmth from something that had nothing to do with the temperature of my latte. Across from me, Morgan Snyder looked exactly as I remembered from our college music club days—thoughtful brown eyes, the same patient smile that had once helped me through difficult compositions.
"You look tired," he said gently, not accusingly. Just an observation from someone who genuinely cared.
I almost laughed. Tired didn't begin to cover it. Three weeks since the hospital, two weeks since I'd walked out of that house with nothing but a suitcase and my dignity. "I've had better months."
"The offer still stands, Kyla." Morgan leaned forward slightly, his voice earnest. "Senior Marketing Director. Your own team, full benefits, and honestly? We need someone with your instincts. I've followed your work at Hartwell & Associates. That campaign you did for the Morrison Group was brilliant."
I studied his face, searching for pity or charity, but found neither. Just respect. When was the last time someone had looked at me like that? "You don't even know what kind of mess I'm dealing with right now."
"I know you're going through a divorce. I know you're one of the most talented people I've ever worked with." He paused, his fingers drumming once against the table. "And I know you deserve better than whatever brought you to this point."
The simplicity of his faith in me was almost overwhelming. No conditions, no judgment, no expectation that I owe him anything in return. "When would you need an answer?"
"Take all the time you need. But Kyla?" His smile was warm, familiar. "You're going to be fine. Better than fine."
Two hours later, I sat in David Chen's law office, watching my attorney flip through documents with the precision of a surgeon. Everything about David was sharp—his suit, his glasses, the way he dissected legal language like he was performing an autopsy.
"They're offering you thirty percent," he said, his tone suggesting what he thought of that number. "Of assets you helped build over six years of marriage."
Evan's lawyer, a soft-spoken man named Peterson, cleared his throat. "My client feels this is more than generous, considering the circumstances."
"What circumstances?" David's voice could have cut glass. "That your client abandoned his pregnant wife during a medical emergency to play hero for his mistress?"
Evan shifted in his seat beside Peterson, but it was Adhara who spoke up from her chair near the window. "Kyla should be grateful we're offering anything at all. Most women in her position would just take what they could get and move on."
The silence that followed was deafening. David slowly removed his glasses, cleaning them with deliberate care. "Ms. Kennedy, are you representing yourself in these proceedings?"
"I'm here as emotional support for Evan," she said, one hand resting on her still-flat stomach.
"Then I suggest you remain silent, or I'll have you removed." David's smile was razor-thin. "And Ms. Kennedy? If you think your boyfriend's wife should be 'grateful' for scraps while you move into her home, perhaps you'd like me to file a motion detailing exactly how your affair contributed to Mrs. Collins' medical emergency. I'm sure the judge would find it fascinating reading."
Adhara's face went pale, but she pressed her lips together and said nothing more.
"Fifty-fifty split of all marital assets," David continued, turning back to Peterson. "Including the house, both vehicles, and all investment accounts. Non-negotiable."
"That's ridiculous," Evan finally spoke, his voice tight with frustration. "I built that business—"
"With your wife's support and sacrifice," David interrupted. "She gave up her family's financial backing to build a life with you. She deserves half of everything you built together."
I watched Evan's face cycle through anger, disbelief, and something that might have been guilt. Good. Let him feel it.
My new apartment was a far cry from the house Evan and I had shared, but it was mine. One bedroom, a galley kitchen, and a living room barely big enough for my secondhand furniture. I stood at the window, looking out at the city lights, when my phone rang for the fifteenth time that day.
"What, Evan?"
"Kyla, please. Just accept the settlement offer. We can both move forward, start fresh. Adhara and I need to prepare for the baby, and this legal battle is just making everything harder."
I closed my eyes, feeling the familiar tug of old habits—the urge to smooth things over, to make his life easier. "You made your choice that night. Now live with the consequences."
"Don't be vindictive. This isn't like you."
"You're right," I said, surprising myself with how calm I sounded. "The old me would have rolled over and taken whatever scraps you offered. But she died in that hospital room while you were playing knight in shining armor for someone else."
I hung up and turned off my phone. Tomorrow, I would start my new job at Morgan's firm. Tonight, I would plan my first presentation and prove to myself that I was worth more than Evan Collins had ever realized.
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