
Divorce After Affair's Truth
Chapter 3
Monday morning arrived with the crisp clarity of winter air, and I sat at my kitchen table with my laptop open, watching the cursor blink in the company group chat window. Three days of methodical evidence gathering had led to this moment. My fingers hovered over the keyboard, steady as a surgeon's.
I'd organized everything into a single, devastating post. Screenshots arranged chronologically. Photos with timestamps clearly visible. Bank statements showing jewelry purchases I'd never received. The perfume bottle from my guest room nightstand, photographed next to Dr. Chen's medical report identifying the exact allergen that had been slowly poisoning my husband.
The message I typed was simple, dignified: "I think everyone should know who they're really working with. The attached evidence speaks for itself. I won't be responding to questions, but I believe in transparency and truth."
My finger hovered over the send button. Once I pressed it, there would be no going back. Joel and Sofia's carefully constructed professional facades would crumble in real time, their reputations scattered like ash in the wind.
I thought of Jude's voice saying he wished I would disappear forever. I thought of Sofia's triumphant laughter. I thought of Joel's weak, performative defense that fooled no one.
I clicked send.
The response was immediate. Within minutes, my phone buzzed with notifications as colleagues reacted with shock, anger, and support. The evidence was irrefutable, the timeline damning. By noon, both Joel and Sofia would be facing professional ruin as the screenshots spread beyond our company to their broader networks.
I closed the laptop and went to pack.
***
The law office smelled like leather and old money, its mahogany panels designed to intimidate. But I felt nothing but cold determination as I sat across from Marcus Pemberton, my attorney, waiting for Joel to arrive. The divorce papers lay between us like a death certificate for my former life.
Joel entered looking like a ghost of himself. His skin was still pale from his latest hospital stay, his usually perfect hair disheveled. But it was his eyes that told the real story—the wild desperation of a man watching his world collapse in real time.
"Katherine." His voice cracked on my name. "We need to talk. Please."
I looked at him with the detached interest one might show a stranger on the street. "There's nothing to discuss. Sign the papers."
"The affair—it didn't mean anything. Sofia, she... she seduced me. I was weak, I made a mistake, but it's over now. It's been over." The words tumbled out of him, each one more pathetic than the last. "We can fix this. We can go to counseling. I'll do anything."
I watched him lie to my face with the same practiced sincerity he'd used for years, and felt nothing but a vast, echoing emptiness where my love for him used to live.
"I don't care anymore," I said simply.
The words hit him like a physical blow. He lurched forward, reaching for my wrist with desperate fingers. "Katherine, please. You can't just throw away ten years—"
I pulled my arm back so sharply, so finally, that he actually recoiled as if I'd struck him. The gesture carried the weight of absolute rejection, of a door slamming shut forever.
"Ten years," I repeated, my voice steady as stone. "Ten years of lies. Ten years of betrayal. Ten years of you and Sofia laughing at how easily you fooled me." I stood, smoothing my skirt with mechanical precision. "Sign the papers, Joel. It's over."
His signature was shaky, desperate, but legally binding. When he looked up at me one last time, I was already walking toward the door.
***
The London transfer paperwork felt like a passport to freedom. I'd specifically requested immediate relocation, emphasizing the urgent need for my expertise in the European markets. My boss had been sympathetic—the company gossip mill had already processed my public humiliation and emerged with overwhelming support for my decision.
My apartment looked strange with everything packed away. I'd taken only essentials: clothes, documents, my grandmother's jewelry. Everything else—the wedding photos with their fake smiles, the anniversary gifts that now felt like mockery, the carefully curated life I'd built with a man who never existed—I left behind like shed skin.
Sofia's texts had been relentless since Monday morning: "Katherine, we need to talk." "You don't understand the whole story." "I can explain everything." "Please don't do this to Jude."
I blocked her number without reading the rest.
As I loaded my suitcases into the taxi, I felt my phone buzz with one final message from an unknown number. For a moment, I hesitated. Then I deleted it without reading and turned off my phone.
London was waiting. And for the first time in ten years, the future belonged entirely to me.
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