
He Crushed My Fingers to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 1
I arranged the roses exactly as I had on our first anniversary, their crimson petals catching the light from the crystal chandelier above our dining table. The penthouse was silent except for the soft classical music I'd selected—Chopin's Nocturne in E-flat major, the piece Silas had once said made him fall in love with my hands. Five years ago, he had listened to me play it with such reverence, as though my fingers were weaving magic instead of simply following the notes. Tonight, the music felt like a ghost of that memory, haunting the space between us.
Five years. Five years since I had walked down the aisle in a gown that cost more than most people's homes, five years since I had believed in fairytales. The dining room glowed with candlelight, casting long shadows across the walls of our penthouse—a gilded cage high above Manhattan, where the city lights below looked like fallen stars.
I smoothed the fabric of my dress, a midnight blue that Silas had once said brought out the silver flecks in my eyes. The table was set with our finest china, the wine decanted, the food kept warm. Everything perfect, as it always was. As it had to be.
The clock struck nine. Then ten. By eleven, the candles had burned halfway down, and I had checked my phone seventeen times. No messages. No calls. I knew where he was, of course. I always knew.
At eleven-thirty, the elevator chimed, and I straightened my spine, pasting on the smile I had perfected over years of society events and charity galas. The smile that said everything was fine, that I was fine, that we were fine.
"Emory," Silas said as he strode in, loosening his tie. He didn't apologize. He never apologized. "You shouldn't have waited up. I told you I had a late meeting."
He didn't mention the anniversary. He didn't have to—the careful setting, the flowers, the candles all spoke of it. But acknowledging it would mean acknowledging that we were supposed to be celebrating something, and Silas had long ago stopped celebrating anything about our marriage.
"I made dinner," I said softly, rising to pull out his chair. My pianist's hands—the hands he had once kissed reverently, promising to protect them always—moved with practiced grace. "Your favorite. The chef's special."
He barely glanced at the table as he sat down, already reaching for his phone. "I already ate. But this is... thoughtful."
The word landed like a stone in still water. Thoughtful. As though I were a stranger who had done him a small kindness, rather than his wife who had spent hours preparing for this night.
Before I could respond, his phone lit up with Mabel's name, and his entire demeanor shifted. The cold indifference in his eyes warmed, softened. He answered immediately, turning slightly away from me.
"Mabel, darling," he murmured, his voice dropping to that intimate register I hadn't heard directed at me in years. "No, I just got in. Yes, she's here. Don't worry. I'll handle it."
My fingers found the stem of my wine glass, gripping it so tightly I feared it might shatter. I watched my husband—my husband—speak to his mistress right at our anniversary dinner table, his back half-turned to me as though I were an inconvenience he had to manage.
I reached into my bag, my movements slow and deliberate. The divorce papers felt heavy in my hands, though they were just paper. Just words on a page. But they were my words, my decision, my line in the sand.
I slid them across the polished mahogany, watching as they came to rest beside his untouched plate. "I think it's time we stopped pretending," I said quietly.
Silas looked down at the papers, then up at me, his expression a mixture of surprise and something that might have been amusement. "What's this?" he asked, though he knew.
"Divorce papers," I replied, my voice steadier than I felt. "I've had them drawn up. Everything is fair. I don't want your money, Silas. I just want... out."
He stared at the papers for a long moment, then let out a short, dismissive laugh. Without a word, he picked up his pen and signed each page with quick, careless strokes, not bothering to read a single line.
"There," he said, pushing the papers back toward me. "Happy now? But we both know you won't go through with it. You love me too much. You always have. You always will."
He stood up, dropping his napkin onto the table. "I have an early meeting tomorrow. Don't wait up."
As the elevator doors closed behind him, I sat alone at the table set for two, surrounded by the ruins of what I had thought was love.
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