
Divorce After Betrayal
Chapter 3
I sat on the edge of my bed, staring at the locked door that had once been merely decorative in our marriage. Now it was my only barrier against the accusations swirling through our penthouse. My fingers traced the edge of my phone, contemplating who I could possibly call. After twelve years of putting Ryan first, my own social circle had withered to acquaintances who were really his friends, his business partners, his admirers.
A soft knock interrupted my thoughts.
"Mrs. Crawford?" Maria's voice was barely audible through the door.
I rose quickly, hope fluttering in my chest. Maria had been with us for over a decade. She'd witnessed the gradual erosion of my marriage, had seen me retreat further into myself with each of Ryan's affairs. If anyone in this household knew the truth of who I was, it would be her.
"Maria," I said, unlocking the door with trembling fingers. "Thank God. I need your help to—"
The words died on my lips as I took in her appearance. Maria stood rigid in the hallway, her usually warm brown eyes fixed somewhere over my shoulder. In her hands, she clutched an empty prescription bottle—Ashley's prenatal vitamins.
"Maria?" I whispered, a chill creeping up my spine.
"Mr. Crawford asked me to come," she said, her voice unnaturally flat. "He wants to know if I saw anything... unusual."
Behind her, I could see Ryan standing at the end of the hallway, arms crossed, watching our interaction with cold calculation.
"You know I would never do something like that," I said, searching her face for any sign of the woman who had once left fresh flowers on my nightstand each morning. "Maria, please."
She finally met my eyes, and what I saw there made my blood run cold. Not hatred or anger, but something worse—pity mixed with resolution.
"I saw Mrs. Crawford in the kitchen early this morning," she said, her voice carrying down the hallway to where Ryan stood. "She was... doing something with Miss Morgan's vitamins."
The lie hung in the air between us. I stared at her, uncomprehending. This woman who had witnessed my suffering, who had silently supported me through years of humiliation—she was betraying me now when I needed her most.
"That's not true," I whispered, my voice breaking. "You know that's not true."
Something flickered in Maria's eyes—regret, perhaps, or shame—before she looked away again. "I'm sorry, Mrs. Crawford. I know what I saw."
Ryan approached then, placing a proprietary hand on Maria's shoulder. "Thank you, Maria. You can go now."
She nodded, still avoiding my gaze, and turned to leave. As she walked away, I noticed a slight tremor in her hands, the only indication that her betrayal had cost her anything at all.
Ryan's face was a mask of righteous anger as he pushed me back into the bedroom. "You're staying in here until I figure out what to do with you."
The door slammed shut, the lock clicking into place from the outside.
"Ryan!" I pounded my fists against the solid wood. "This is insane! You can't just lock me in here!"
Silence answered me. I pressed my ear against the door and heard the murmur of voices—Ryan and Maria. I couldn't make out their words, but the tone was clear: my fate was being decided without me.
After what felt like hours but was probably only minutes, I heard Maria's footsteps approaching again. I stepped back from the door, composing myself.
"Mrs. Crawford?" Her voice was softer now, hesitant. "I've brought you some tea."
The lock turned, and she entered with a tray, her eyes still unable to meet mine.
"Why?" I asked simply.
Maria set the tray down with shaking hands. "Some things are more important than the truth," she whispered, so quietly I almost didn't hear her.
Before I could respond, she was gone, locking the door behind her.
I waited until her footsteps faded, then immediately moved to action. The bedroom door was locked, but Ryan had forgotten about the connecting door to my study—a room he rarely entered anymore. I slipped through it, my mind racing. I had minutes, perhaps, before someone realized I wasn't where I was supposed to be.
In the study, I grabbed my personal laptop and phone, then quietly locked the study door from the inside. My fingers flew across the keyboard, accessing accounts Ryan knew nothing about, making calls to people who owed me, not him. I had been planning my escape for longer than I cared to admit, but now the timeline had accelerated dramatically.
As I worked, a bitter realization settled in my chest: Maria's betrayal had severed my last tie to this life. There was nothing left for me here but humiliation and false accusations.
It was time to disappear.
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