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Leaving My Husband Novel Cover

Leaving My Husband

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.
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Chapter 3

The Sterling Financial Group's annual charity gala was always a spectacle of wealth and influence. Tonight was no exception, with the city's elite gathered at the Grand Meridian Hotel's ballroom. I stood beside Marcus, wearing a midnight blue gown that had cost more than my monthly budget for household expenses. The dress hugged my body in all the right places, but Marcus hadn't spared it a single glance.

"You look lovely tonight, Isabella," Richard Westbrook, one of Marcus's business partners, commented as he passed by with his wife.

I smiled, grateful for the acknowledgment. "Thank you, Richard."

Marcus's hand tightened slightly on my waist—not a gesture of affection, but a reminder that I was on display. His perfect wife, completing his perfect image.

Across the room, I spotted her. Sophia, dressed in a form-fitting red dress that seemed designed to draw every eye in the room. Including my husband's. She caught my gaze and smiled before making her way toward us.

"Marcus, the Hendersons are asking about the Tokyo expansion," she said, completely ignoring me. "They're at table seven."

"I'll be right there," Marcus replied, his tone warmer than any he'd used with me all evening. "Isabella, why don't you get yourself another drink?"

It wasn't a suggestion. It was a dismissal.

I nodded, stepping away as Sophia placed her hand on Marcus's arm, guiding him toward the Hendersons. The casual intimacy of the gesture made my stomach clench.

At the bar, I ordered a sparkling water, needing to keep my wits about me. The evening stretched ahead like an endless minefield.

Dinner was announced, and I found my seat at our assigned table. Marcus was deep in conversation with potential investors, while Sophia had somehow secured a seat directly across from me. Her presence was a constant reminder of everything I was losing.

The servers brought out the first course—a delicate seafood appetizer. I noticed Marcus discreetly push his plate aside.

"Not a fan of shellfish?" I asked, trying to engage him in conversation.

Before he could answer, Sophia leaned forward, her voice just loud enough for everyone at our table to hear.

"Oh, didn't you know? Marcus can't eat shellfish after 8 PM. It gives him terrible indigestion." She smiled, all innocent helpfulness. "I thought you'd want to know."

The table fell silent. Seven years of marriage, and I didn't know this basic fact about my husband's dietary restrictions. Seven years, while this woman who'd known him for months spoke with the authority of intimate knowledge.

Heat crept up my neck as I felt curious glances from the other guests. Marcus didn't contradict her or come to my defense. He simply nodded, confirming her statement.

"Right," I managed to say, my voice surprisingly steady despite the humiliation burning through me. "I must have forgotten."

But we both knew I hadn't forgotten. I had never known.

---

The following afternoon, I found myself in my mother's small apartment in Wicker Park. The place was meticulously clean but cramped, a stark contrast to my spacious Lincoln Park home. My brother's medical equipment took up most of the living room—a constant reminder of why my mother pushed me so hard to maintain my marriage.

"You're being paranoid," my mother said, placing a cup of tea in front of me. "Men have work colleagues. It doesn't mean anything."

"Mom, she bought Dylan an expensive gaming console. She texts Marcus at all hours. She knows things about him that I don't."

My mother's expression hardened. "And what exactly do you plan to do about it? Leave him?"

The question hung in the air between us.

"I don't know," I admitted. "I'm not happy anymore."

"Happiness." She practically spat the word. "You know what doesn't bring happiness? Watching your child suffer because you can't afford his medication." She gestured toward my brother's room. "Think of your brother's medical bills—Marcus supports us. Don't be foolish."

The guilt crashed over me like a wave. My mother had sacrificed everything for us after my father left. Now my brother's treatment depended on Marcus's generosity.

"I'm not saying I'll leave," I whispered. "I just... I don't know what to do."

My mother reached across the table, gripping my hand with surprising strength. "You do what women have done for centuries. You endure. You think of your family first."

I left her apartment with her words echoing in my head. *Endure. Think of your family first.* But which family? The one I was born into, or the one I had created?

---

Two weeks later, I lay on the examination table at my doctor's office, the cold gel on my abdomen a shock against my warm skin. The ultrasound technician moved the wand slowly, the grainy image on the screen gradually coming into focus.

"There's your baby," she said, smiling. "Strong heartbeat. Everything looks perfect."

I stared at the tiny form, emotion welling up in my throat. Another child. A sibling for Dylan.

"Would you like to know the gender?" the technician asked.

I hesitated, wishing Marcus was beside me as he had been during my pregnancy with Dylan. But he had canceled at the last minute, citing an emergency meeting.

"Yes," I finally said. "I'd like to know."

"It's a girl," she told me, her voice warm with congratulation. "You're having a daughter."

A daughter. Tears sprang to my eyes—tears of joy mingled with a profound sadness. I had always wanted a little girl, but now the news felt bittersweet.

That evening, I prepared Marcus's favorite meal—a celebration dinner to share the news about our daughter. I set the table with our best china, placed a small pink baby bootie beside his plate as a surprise, and waited.

And waited.

At 9:30, my phone chimed with a text: *Working late. Don't wait up.*

I sat alone at the perfectly set table, staring at the untouched food and the tiny pink bootie. Our daughter deserved better than this. *I* deserved better than this.

For the first time, I allowed myself to fully acknowledge the truth I'd been avoiding: my marriage was not just in trouble—it was broken beyond repair.

And I was carrying a child who would be born into this brokenness unless I found the courage to change our path.

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