
Divorce After His Affair
Chapter 3
The sound of a car door slamming in my driveway made me look up from the divorce papers scattered across my kitchen table. Through the window, I watched Paisley Reed emerge from a sleek black sedan, her arms laden with empty moving boxes.
My blood turned to ice. She walked up my front steps like she owned them, her heels clicking against the stone with deliberate confidence. When she rang the doorbell, I almost didn't answer. But something in me—pride, fury, or maybe just morbid curiosity—made me open the door.
"Laura." Paisley's smile was saccharine, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "Brandon sent me to collect his things. I hope you don't mind."
She didn't wait for an invitation, pushing past me into my foyer with her boxes. The audacity stole my breath. This woman—this girl—was standing in my home, the sanctuary I'd built with my own hands and heart.
"He couldn't come himself?" I managed, my voice steadier than I felt.
"Oh, he's far too busy with the business crisis." Paisley set down her boxes and looked around with appraising eyes. "Though I have to say, this place could use some work. So drab and outdated. I'm thinking we'll redecorate completely once everything's settled."
We. The word hit me like a physical blow. She was already planning their future in my present.
I followed her as she moved through my living room, her fingers trailing over surfaces I'd carefully chosen, dismissing years of my life with casual cruelty. When she reached the staircase, I found my voice.
"The bedroom is upstairs," I said coldly. "I assume that's what you're here for."
Paisley's laugh tinkled like broken glass. "Among other things."
She climbed my stairs like she'd done it a thousand times before. In the master bedroom—our bedroom—she moved with practiced efficiency, pulling Brandon's clothes from the closet and folding them into her boxes. But it was when she wandered into the en-suite bathroom that my composure finally cracked.
"Oh, this is lovely," she said, picking up my expensive La Mer moisturizer. Without asking, she squeezed some onto her palm and began rubbing it into her skin. "Brandon mentioned you had excellent taste in skincare. I've been dying to try this."
She moved to my vanity, sampling my serums and creams like she was shopping at Sephora. Each casual violation of my personal space felt like another small death.
"You know," Paisley said, meeting my eyes in the mirror as she applied my lipstick, "Brandon's told me so much about you. How devoted you were. How you sacrificed everything for his success." She pressed her lips together, perfecting the color. "It's really quite admirable, in a tragic sort of way."
The doorbell rang again, cutting through the toxic atmosphere. Paisley raised an eyebrow. "Expecting someone?"
I wasn't, but I welcomed any interruption from this nightmare. I hurried downstairs, leaving her to continue her grotesque performance in my bathroom.
When I opened the front door, my world shifted on its axis.
"Jack?"
Jack Williams stood on my doorstep, and for a moment I wondered if I was hallucinating. Taller than I remembered, broader through the shoulders, but with the same kind eyes that had watched me stumble through adolescence. His dark hair was shorter now, professional, and he wore a charcoal suit that spoke of success. But his smile—that was exactly the same.
"Hello, Laura."
Before I could respond, Paisley's voice drifted down from upstairs. "Laura, darling, where do you keep the good towels? These thread counts are simply unacceptable."
Jack's expression shifted, his eyes sharpening as he took in my obvious distress. "Bad time?"
"The worst," I whispered, then louder, "No, please. Come in."
Paisley appeared at the top of the stairs, now wearing one of my silk robes over her clothes. When she saw Jack, her entire demeanor changed, shifting into predatory mode.
"Well, hello there." She descended the stairs slowly, deliberately, the robe falling open just enough to be provocative. "I'm Paisley Reed. Brandon's girlfriend."
The word hung in the air like poison. Jack's jaw tightened almost imperceptibly, but his voice remained steady. "Jack Williams. Laura's friend."
"Friend?" Paisley's eyes glittered with malicious interest. "How nice that Laura has... support during this difficult transition."
The tension in my foyer was suffocating. Jack stepped closer to me, not quite touching but close enough that I could smell his familiar cologne—cedar and something warm I couldn't name.
"Perhaps we should continue this conversation outside," Jack said to me, his tone carefully neutral but his eyes promising protection.
Paisley laughed, the sound sharp and brittle. "Oh, don't let me interrupt. I'll just finish up here." She gestured toward the boxes. "Brandon's things won't pack themselves."
Jack's hand found the small of my back, steady and warm. "The garden?" he asked quietly.
I nodded, desperate to escape the suffocating cruelty of Paisley's presence. As we walked toward the French doors leading to my backyard, I heard her call out behind us.
"So lovely to meet you, Jack. I'm sure we'll be seeing much more of each other."
The threat in her voice was unmistakable.
You may also like





