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Leaving a Loveless Marriage Novel Cover

Leaving a Loveless Marriage

I woke before the alarm, as I always did on our anniversary. Ten years today. A decade of marriage to Nathan Reed—a marriage I had fought for, dreamed of, and sacrificed everything to maintain. My fingers traced the cool, empty space beside me where Nathan should have been. He hadn't come to bed last night. Again. The pale morning light filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Upper East Side penthouse as I slipped into my robe and padded to the kitchen. Each movement was practiced, precise—like a dance I'd performed thousands of times. Coffee brewed exactly how he liked it. The New York Times folded at the business section.
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Chapter 1

I woke before the alarm, as I always did on our anniversary. Ten years today. A decade of marriage to Nathan Reed—a marriage I had fought for, dreamed of, and sacrificed everything to maintain. My fingers traced the cool, empty space beside me where Nathan should have been. He hadn't come to bed last night. Again.

The pale morning light filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Upper East Side penthouse as I slipped into my robe and padded to the kitchen. Each movement was practiced, precise—like a dance I'd performed thousands of times. Coffee brewed exactly how he liked it. The New York Times folded at the business section. His favorite breakfast of poached eggs and avocado toast arranged on the Wedgwood china he never noticed but would certainly complain about if it were missing.

I heard the elevator doors open and straightened my posture, brushing invisible lint from my silk robe. A smile fixed itself to my face—hopeful, eager, ready to receive whatever scraps of attention he might toss my way today.

"Good morning," I said, my voice lilting upward with practiced cheerfulness. "Happy anniversary."

Nathan barely glanced at me as he strode into the kitchen, his tall frame impeccably dressed in a charcoal Tom Ford suit that I had laid out for him yesterday. He grabbed the coffee mug from my outstretched hand without a word, took a sip, and frowned.

"It's cold," he said, placing it down with enough force that some splashed onto the pristine marble countertop.

"I'm sorry," I whispered, already reaching for a fresh mug. "I'll make another."

He checked his watch—the Patek Philippe I had given him for our fifth anniversary—and shook his head. "Don't bother. We need to talk."

Four words that made my stomach clench. In our ten years of marriage, nothing good had ever followed that phrase.

"Of course," I said, folding my trembling hands in front of me. "What is it?"

He didn't answer immediately, just studied me with those cold blue eyes that had once made my heart race with longing. Now they made it race with anxiety.

"I'll be back at noon," he finally said. "Be here."

With that, he was gone, leaving me standing in our immaculate kitchen, surrounded by the breakfast he wouldn't eat and the anniversary he wouldn't acknowledge.

I spent the morning in a fog of nervous anticipation. What did he want to talk about? Had he remembered our anniversary after all? Was there a surprise waiting? Even after twenty years of loving Nathan Reed—ten of them as his wife—hope was still my most faithful companion.

At precisely noon, the elevator chimed. I smoothed my dress—a new one, navy blue, modest but flattering—and waited in the foyer with my hands clasped. The doors slid open to reveal Nathan, but he wasn't alone.

She stood beside him, small and fragile-looking, with wild dark curls and enormous eyes that darted nervously around our home. Isabella Hayes. Nathan's first love. The woman whose ghost had haunted our marriage for a decade.

"Claire," Nathan said, his voice clipped and businesslike, "Isabella is coming home today."

Home. As if this had always been her home too.

I stood frozen as Nathan guided Isabella into our living room, his hand protectively at the small of her back. Behind them came a parade of staff carrying luggage—so much luggage—and then something that made my blood run cold: a long glass terrarium containing a massive python, its scales gleaming under the recessed lighting.

"Where would you like this, sir?" asked one of the handlers, struggling under the weight of the tank.

"By the window," Nathan replied. "Isabella's python needs natural light."

I watched in silent horror as our living room transformed before my eyes. Nathan personally removed the framed photographs of us—of our wedding, our travels, our life together—and replaced them with Isabella's sketches. Dark, disturbing images that seemed to writhe on the paper like the snake now installed by our panoramic view of Central Park.

"Nathan," I finally managed to say, my voice barely audible. "What's happening?"

"Isabella needs a stable environment," he replied without looking at me. "The doctors think familiar surroundings will help her recovery."

"But this isn't familiar to her," I said. "She's never lived here."

He turned to me then, his expression cold. "She's lived with me. That's what's familiar."

The hours that followed were a blur of activity as Isabella was settled in. I moved through it like a ghost in my own home, preparing dinner as Nathan had instructed—"Something simple, nothing that might upset Isabella's stomach"—and setting the table for three instead of our usual two.

Dinner was excruciating. Isabella picked at her food while Nathan watched her with concern etched across his features—more emotion than he'd shown me in years. I sat silently, knife and fork moving mechanically, until a sudden movement caught my eye.

The python had somehow escaped its enclosure.

"Nathan," I whispered, my eyes fixed on the massive snake slithering across our dining room floor.

But it was too late. With terrifying speed, the python lunged, its fangs sinking deep into my thigh. White-hot pain exploded through my body as I collapsed to the floor, blood seeping through my new dress.

"Isabella!" Nathan shouted, but not to help me. No, he rushed to her side as she began to scream hysterically, cradling her in his arms while I lay bleeding on our Italian marble.

"Calm down, Claire," he barked at me over his shoulder. "You're upsetting her."

I pressed my hands against the wound, watching my blood pool beneath me, feeling the venom spread through my veins like fire. Through a haze of pain, I saw Nathan rock Isabella back and forth, whispering soothing words into her hair.

"I'm sorry about this," he said to me without meeting my eyes. "I promise, this is the last time."

The last time. How many last times had there been in our twenty years together? How many times had I believed him?

As darkness crept into the edges of my vision, something crystallized within me—a realization as sharp and venomous as the bite that was currently threatening my life: I would never be his priority. Not if I stayed for another ten years. Not if I stayed forever.

This truly would be the last time. But not in the way Nathan meant it.

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