
Leaving My Husband
Leaving My Husband Chapter 1
Seven years. Seven years of marriage to Marcus Sterling, and here I was, standing in our Lincoln Park dining room, adjusting the silverware for the third time. The candles I'd lit an hour ago were already halfway burned down, casting a warm glow across the table set with Marcus's favorite dishes—beef Wellington, roasted asparagus, and the chocolate soufflé waiting in the oven, timed to perfection.
I smoothed down the emerald green dress I'd bought specifically for tonight, the fabric hugging my curves in a way I hoped would remind Marcus of the woman he'd fallen in love with, not just the mother of his child. My hair was styled in loose waves, the way he used to like it before Dylan was born, before business calls became more important than dinner conversation.
"Mommy, when is Daddy coming home?" Dylan's small voice called from the doorway. He stood there in his pajamas, clutching his favorite teddy bear.
"Soon, sweetheart," I promised, checking my watch. Two hours late already. "He's just working hard. Now back to bed, okay?"
After tucking Dylan in again, I returned to the dining room and checked my phone. No messages. I sent another text—casual, not nagging: *Dinner's ready whenever you are. Happy Anniversary.*
Another hour passed. The candles burned lower, and I sipped my wine, watching the shadows lengthen across our perfectly decorated home. The home I'd created while putting my marketing career on indefinite hold. The home that sometimes felt more like a beautiful, empty shell than the warm family nest I'd envisioned.
When the front door finally opened at 9:30 PM, I straightened, pasting on a smile. Marcus walked in, his attention fixed on his phone, thumbs tapping rapidly.
"There you are," I said, rising to greet him. "Happy anniversary."
He looked up, momentarily confused, then his expression cleared. "Right. Seven years." He glanced at the elaborate dinner spread. "You didn't have to go to all this trouble."
"I wanted to." I leaned in for a kiss, but he turned his head slightly, so my lips brushed his cheek instead. The scent of his cologne—expensive, subtle—mixed with something else. A floral perfume that wasn't mine.
I pushed the thought away. "I have something for you." I retrieved the small wrapped box from the sideboard and handed it to him.
He unwrapped it methodically, no excitement in his movements. Inside was a platinum watch, its back engraved with our wedding date and the words *Forever Yours*.
"Thank you," he said, glancing at it briefly before setting it aside. "It's nice."
*Nice*. Seven years of marriage reduced to *nice*.
"Aren't you going to try it on?" I asked, unable to keep the disappointment from my voice.
"Later," he said, already walking toward his study. "I need to make some calls. The Westbrook merger is falling apart."
"Marcus, it's our anniversary. Can't the calls wait until morning?"
He paused, his expression hardening. "Isabella, this merger is worth millions. I'm sorry about dinner, but some things can't wait." The study door closed behind him with a soft click that somehow felt louder than a slam.
I sat alone at the table, the candles now guttering in pools of wax. The soufflé had collapsed in the oven, a sad metaphor I wasn't ready to acknowledge.
Hours later, as I was cleaning up, Marcus emerged from his study. "I'm flying to New York tomorrow morning. Early flight."
"How long this time?"
"Three days. Maybe four." He loosened his tie. "I'm going to bed."
No anniversary gift for me. No acknowledgment of the dinner I'd spent all day preparing. Just another business trip.
As I finished loading the dishwasher, I noticed his overnight bag by the door, already packed. A flash of his cologne bottle on the counter caught my eye—the special one he always took on important trips. He'd forgotten it.
I picked it up, weighing it in my hand. Maybe if I brought it to him at the office, he'd appreciate the gesture. Maybe he'd remember, for just a moment, that he had a wife who cared about the details of his life.
It was nearly 11 PM when I pulled into the parking garage at Sterling Financial Group. The building was mostly dark, but lights still burned on the executive floor. I clutched the cologne bottle like a peace offering as I rode the elevator up.
The door to Marcus's office was ajar, and I heard a woman's laugh—light, intimate—before I pushed it open.
She was perched on the edge of his desk, holding his suit jacket. Young, beautiful, with confident eyes that assessed me instantly. Sophia Walsh, according to the ID badge clipped to her blouse.
"Can I help you?" she asked, not moving from her position.
"I'm looking for my husband. Marcus Sterling."
Something flashed in her eyes—recognition, but not surprise. "Oh, I know who you are." Her tone made it clear that knowing who I was didn't mean respecting what I represented. "Marcus stepped out to take a call about our flight tomorrow."
*Our* flight.
"He forgot his cologne," I said, holding up the bottle, suddenly feeling foolish.
Sophia smiled, reaching for it. "I'll make sure he gets it. He can't function without his morning coffee and this cologne, can he? So particular." She laughed as if sharing an inside joke.
The casual way she mentioned his morning routine—something intimate, something a wife should know—made my stomach clench. In that moment, standing in my husband's office with this woman who knew the details of his life that should have been mine alone, the perfect image of my marriage shattered like fine crystal dropped on marble.
Leaving My Husband of Contents
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