
Betrayed Wife's New Beginning
Chapter 3
I stared at the resignation letter in my hands, the words blurring slightly as tears threatened to spill over. Three years of dedication to Gibson & Associates, reduced to a single page of corporate jargon. 'Due to personal health reasons and new career opportunities...' The truth was far messier, far more painful, but the board didn't need those details.
The office was quiet this morning. Ariel was locked in back-to-back meetings with investors—meetings I'd arranged last week when I was still playing the role of devoted wife and business partner. Now, I moved through our shared workspace like a ghost, carefully placing personal items into a cardboard box. My business awards. The framed photo of my parents. The small potted succulent Sarah had given me when I first joined the company.
Rachel watched me from her desk, her expression a mixture of confusion and triumph. She thought she'd won. Let her believe that for now.
"Going somewhere?" she finally asked, unable to contain her curiosity.
"Home," I replied simply. Home to Seattle. Home to people who actually loved me.
I placed the resignation letter in the center of the conference table where the board would meet later that afternoon. Beside it, I left another envelope—this one addressed to Ariel personally.
My hand trembled slightly as I set it down. Inside was everything I couldn't bring myself to say to his face: about our baby, about the night I spent alone in the emergency room while he was with her, about how his betrayal had cost us not just our marriage but the life we had created together.
"Goodbye," I whispered to the empty room that had witnessed so much of my life, my ambition, my slow heartbreak.
I didn't look back as I walked out of Gibson & Associates for the last time.
---
Ariel's face was ashen as he burst through our front door that evening. My letter clutched in his hand, crumpled from his grip.
"Celia!" he shouted into the emptiness of our home. "CELIA!"
I wasn't there to witness his panic, his disbelief, but our security system sent notifications to my phone. I watched from the airport lounge as he moved frantically from room to room, discovering the spaces I'd systematically emptied over the past two days.
My clothes gone from the closet. My books missing from the shelves. My toiletries cleared from the bathroom counter.
He tried calling me. Once, twice, seven times in succession. Each time, he was directed to my new voicemail: "You've reached Celia Matthews. I'm starting a new chapter and won't be returning calls to this number."
I turned off the security camera feed as they announced my flight to Seattle. Whatever happened next in that house wasn't my concern anymore.
---
My mother was waiting at the arrivals gate, her familiar face a lighthouse in the storm of my emotions. One look at her—the understanding in her eyes, the unconditional love in her smile—and the careful composure I'd maintained crumbled completely.
"Oh, sweetheart," she whispered, wrapping her arms around me as I collapsed against her. "You're home now."
The drive to my childhood home passed in a blur. Mom didn't push me to talk, just kept one hand on mine as Dad navigated the rainy Seattle streets. They knew pieces of what had happened—I'd called them after signing the divorce papers—but not everything.
My old bedroom looked exactly as I remembered, yet somehow different. Fresh flowers brightened the windowsill. The bed was made with my favorite quilt. A plate of homemade cookies sat on the nightstand beside a steaming mug of tea.
"We thought you might need some comfort," Dad said gruffly, setting my suitcase by the closet.
That night, sitting cross-legged on my childhood bed between my parents, I finally told them everything. About the secret marriage that had slowly suffocated me. About Ariel's public humiliation of me on Valentine's Day. About finding Rachel's lingerie on my pillow. About losing the baby I had wanted so desperately, alone in a hospital room while my husband was with another woman.
"He didn't even know I was pregnant until I wrote it in that letter," I whispered, my voice breaking. "He never asked why I was sick, why I needed to see the doctor. He just... didn't care."
My father's hands clenched into fists, but my mother's eyes held no judgment, only sorrow for my pain and fierce protection.
"You did the right thing, coming home," she said, stroking my hair like she had when I was small. "Now we heal. Together."
For the first time since Valentine's Day, I felt safe. Protected. Loved. The road ahead would be difficult, but I wasn't walking it alone anymore.
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