
Ex-Husband's Confession: Love Beyond The Mission
Chapter 1
I twisted the silver ring on my finger as I surveyed the dining room one final time. Everything was perfect—crystal glasses catching the soft glow of candles, the scent of Alexander's favorite roast filling our penthouse, and a small gift-wrapped box waiting by his plate. Our third wedding anniversary deserved nothing less than perfection.
The clock on the wall read 8:30 PM. Two hours late. I smoothed down my emerald dress—the one he'd once mentioned brought out the color of my eyes—and rearranged the silverware that was already perfectly aligned. Some habits never die, especially when anxiety takes hold.
"Mrs. Bennett, would you like me to reheat the food again?" Helen, our housekeeper, appeared in the doorway, her eyes filled with a sympathy I pretended not to notice.
"No, thank you, Helen. I'm sure Alexander will be home any minute." My voice remained steady even as I twisted my father's ring again. The only possession that felt truly mine in this opulent cage of marble and glass.
The distinctive ping of the private elevator finally broke the silence. I straightened, patting my carefully styled hair and plastering on a smile that had become second nature over three years of marriage.
Alexander strode in, his tailored suit immaculate despite the late hour, his phone still pressed to his ear. His eyes swept over the elaborate table setting, pausing momentarily on the candles before sliding away without recognition. He nodded briefly in my direction—the same polite acknowledgment he might give a stranger—before continuing his conversation about quarterly projections.
"I made your favorite," I said when he finally ended the call, my voice too bright, too hopeful. "And there's chocolate soufflé for dessert."
"I had dinner with the board." His voice was neither cruel nor kind, just factual. He loosened his tie with elegant fingers. "But thank you for the effort, Lily."
My smile didn't falter. I'd perfected the art of maintaining composure in the face of his indifference. "I have something for you, at least." I gestured to the small box by his plate. "Happy anniversary."
Something flickered across his face—surprise, perhaps, that he'd forgotten the date—before his features settled back into their usual mask of control. He picked up the box with the careful precision that characterized his every movement.
Inside was a vintage pocket watch I'd spent months tracking down, identical to one his grandfather had owned. I'd heard him mention it once, offhandedly, to his father. The way his fingers stilled told me I'd chosen well.
"This is... thoughtful," he said, closing the box carefully. "Thank you."
No smile. No kiss. No reciprocal gift. I swallowed the disappointment that threatened to choke me. What had I expected after three years?
"I have some work to finish," he said, already turning toward his study. "Don't wait up."
I remained at the table, surrounded by flickering candles and cooling food, the familiar hollowness expanding in my chest. This was our marriage—my devotion met with his obligation, my love answered with politeness.
An hour later, the sound of voices pulled me from my thoughts. Alexander had emerged from his study, but he wasn't alone. A woman stood beside him—tall, elegant, with the kind of confidence that comes from a lifetime of privilege. Her hand rested on his arm with casual intimacy.
"Lily," Alexander said, his voice suddenly formal. "This is Victoria Sterling."
Victoria's smile was perfect, practiced. "So you're the wife. I've heard... well, very little about you, actually." Her laugh was musical and cruel.
"Victoria and I were together in college," Alexander continued, his eyes not quite meeting mine. "She's recently returned to New York."
Something cold settled in my stomach as Alexander reached into his jacket and produced an envelope.
"I've had these drawn up," he said, placing the papers on the table between us. Divorce papers. "Victoria and I have reconnected, and I think it's time we end this arrangement. I never wanted this marriage, Lily. You know that."
The world seemed to tilt beneath me, but I remained perfectly still, my fingers finding my father's ring again. Three years of love, of trying, of hoping—destroyed in a single sentence.
Victoria's manicured hand squeezed Alexander's arm possessively. "We've wasted enough time apart," she purred.
With steady hands that betrayed none of the shattering happening inside me, I took the pen Alexander offered. My signature looked foreign to me as I wrote it—the last act of Lily Bennett before she ceased to exist.
"I'll have my things out by morning," I said, rising from the table with a dignity I didn't know I possessed.
As I walked to our—his—bedroom to pack, I caught Alexander watching me, his expression unreadable. For a moment, I thought I saw something like regret in those steel-gray eyes.
But then Victoria called his name, and whatever I thought I saw vanished, replaced by the cold mask I'd come to know so well.
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