
Divorce & A 20-Year Freeze
Chapter 1
The candles flickered between us, casting dancing shadows across the gleaming mahogany table. Ryan had insisted on dinner at home tonight—a rarity these days. I should have known something was wrong when he ordered from Le Bernardin instead of suggesting we go there in person. Ryan Mitchell never missed an opportunity to be seen at Manhattan's finest establishments.
He hadn't touched his Dover sole. Instead, he watched me with those calculating eyes that had once made me feel chosen but now made me feel appraised. Like merchandise.
"Sarah," he said, breaking the silence that had stretched between us like a chasm. "We need to talk."
I set down my fork with deliberate care, noting how steady my hand was despite the sudden hollowness in my chest. "I'm listening."
Ryan reached into his suit jacket—Tom Ford, charcoal gray, his power color for important business deals. With practiced precision, he extracted two documents and slid them across the table toward me.
"I've been patient," he said, his voice carrying that familiar tone of finality I'd heard him use in board meetings. "But the situation requires resolution."
I glanced down at the papers. The first bore the heading "Petition for Dissolution of Marriage." The second was emblazoned with "Cryogenic Suspension Consent Form."
"What is this?" I asked, though I already knew. The divorce papers weren't a surprise—I'd sensed our marriage crumbling for months. But the second document...
"Options," Ryan replied, tapping his Patek Philippe watch—a nervous habit he'd developed over the years. "Ashley's mother is dying. Her final wish is to see her daughter married to me."
The name hung in the air between us. Ashley Thompson. I'd seen the texts, noticed the lingering scent of unfamiliar perfume. I just hadn't known there was a name, a face, a story attached to my replacement.
"And these are my choices?" I asked, my voice surprisingly level as I gestured to the papers. "Divorce or... freezing myself?"
Ryan leaned forward, his expression a masterclass in practiced concern. "The cryogenic program is cutting-edge. Twenty years of suspension, and you'd wake up essentially unchanged. By then, Ashley's mother will be long gone, and we can..." he paused, searching for the right euphemism, "...reassess our situation."
I stared at him, truly seeing him perhaps for the first time in our seven years together. This man, who had once quoted Neruda to me under starlight at Princeton, was now calmly suggesting I place myself in suspended animation so he could marry his mistress without the inconvenience of my existence.
"You want me to disappear," I said softly, "and then reappear when it's convenient for you."
"I want to handle this situation with minimal disruption," he corrected, his tone suggesting I was being unreasonable. "The financial compensation package for the cryogenic option is substantial. You'd wake up a wealthy woman."
I traced my finger along the edge of the divorce papers, feeling the weight of the moment. Seven years of dinners like this one, of charity galas and summer homes in the Hamptons, of watching the man I loved transform into someone I barely recognized.
"And if I choose neither?"
Ryan's jaw tightened. "Sarah, be practical. I've made my decision. I'm giving you the courtesy of options."
I nodded slowly, reaching for the Mont Blanc pen he'd placed beside the documents. Our fingers brushed as I took it, and I searched his face for any flicker of regret, any shadow of the man I'd fallen in love with. There was nothing.
With deliberate care, I uncapped the pen and signed my name on the divorce papers.
Ryan's shoulders relaxed, his lips curving into the satisfied smile of a man who'd closed a successful deal. "You're making the sensible choice," he said, already reaching for the papers.
"I always do," I replied, my voice steady as I handed him the signed divorce document.
Later that night, as Ryan slept downstairs in what had become his de facto bedroom, I sat at my writing desk bathed in the soft glow of my lamp. In my hands, I held the cryogenic consent form, completed and signed. The irony wasn't lost on me—I was choosing both options, just not in the way he intended.
As I sealed the envelope, a strange calm settled over me. Tomorrow, I would mail it directly to the laboratory address listed on the form. Ryan would never know until it was too late.
I was choosing to disappear, yes. But not for him. For me.
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