
Husband Loses Everything to Her New Love
Husband Loses Everything to Her New Love Chapter 1
I stood frozen in the doorway of Cole's office, the lunch bag clutched in my trembling hand. The scene before me burned itself into my memory: my husband of ten years pressed against his desk, his hands tangled in Aliyah Mendoza's dark hair as they kissed with a passion he hadn't shown me in years. Her designer handbag—the one I'd seen in the window at Saks last week—lay casually tossed on his desk, alongside a small jewelry box with the ribbon still attached.
They didn't notice me at first. I could have slipped away, pretended I hadn't seen anything—just as I had done countless times before. But something inside me had calcified after a decade of looking the other way.
I cleared my throat.
Cole broke away from Aliyah with irritation rather than guilt flashing across his face. "Lena," he said, his voice clipped and cold. "You should have knocked."
Aliyah didn't even attempt to straighten her blouse or hide the smirk playing at the corners of her mouth. Instead, she deliberately reached for her lipstick and reapplied it in the reflection of her compact mirror, her eyes never leaving mine.
"I thought you might want lunch," I said, surprised by the steadiness in my voice despite the hurricane raging inside me. My gaze drifted to the walls of his office—bare of any family photos, as if Connor and I didn't exist in his world here.
"Just leave it," Cole replied, already turning his attention back to Aliyah, who was now admiring the diamond bracelet that must have been inside the jewelry box.
"Beautiful, isn't it?" Aliyah purred, extending her wrist to catch the light. "Cole has such exquisite taste."
I set the lunch bag down on the corner of his desk and left without another word, my wedding ring suddenly heavy on my finger.
* * *
Dinner that evening was a silent affair, punctuated only by the soft clink of silverware against plates. Connor, perceptive as always, kept glancing between Cole and me, his small fingers unconsciously gripping the handles of his wheelchair whenever the tension thickened.
"Our anniversary is next week," I finally said, breaking the silence. "Ten years."
Cole barely looked up from his phone. "Hmm."
"I saw Aliyah today," I continued, watching his face for any reaction. "She seemed quite pleased with her new bracelet."
He set his phone down with deliberate slowness. "Are we really going to do this now?"
"When would be a better time?" I asked. "You've never once given me an anniversary gift, Cole. Not in ten years. Yet Aliyah gets diamonds and designer handbags?"
Connor's knuckles whitened on his wheelchair handles, but he remained silent, his eyes fixed on his plate.
"Stop being paranoid, Lena," Cole snapped, his voice sharp enough to make Connor flinch. "You should focus on Connor's needs instead of your materialistic wants. It's unbecoming."
"My needs?" Connor whispered, so softly I almost missed it.
Cole didn't even acknowledge that our son had spoken. He simply returned to his phone, effectively ending the conversation.
* * *
The next day, I received a frantic call from Connor's school. When I arrived, a crowd had gathered in the playground, with Aliyah Mendoza at its center, her voice carrying across the schoolyard.
"It was deliberate," she was saying to the circle of parents. "Tommy could have drowned. A wheelchair doesn't excuse violence."
I pushed through the crowd to find Connor sitting alone, tears streaming down his face as Aliyah continued her performance.
"What happened?" I demanded, kneeling beside Connor's wheelchair.
"She says I pushed Tommy into the pond," Connor whispered, his voice breaking. "But I didn't, Mom. He was showing me a frog and slipped. I tried to grab him but—" he gestured helplessly at his legs.
Aliyah turned at the sound of my voice, her eyes lighting up with malicious pleasure. "Ah, Mrs. Edwards. How convenient that you've arrived. We were just discussing your son's behavior problems."
"My son doesn't have behavior problems," I said firmly, standing to face her.
"Children act out when they come from damaged homes," Aliyah replied loudly enough for everyone to hear. "It's hardly surprising that Connor has issues, given his... unstable home environment."
The other parents shifted uncomfortably, some avoiding my gaze while others watched the confrontation with undisguised interest.
"You know nothing about my home or my son," I said, my voice low but steady.
Aliyah smiled, the same smile I'd seen in Cole's office. "I know more than you think, Lena. Much more."
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