
Love After a Broken Marriage
Chapter 1
The Seattle rain pattered against the taxi window as I stared at the familiar skyline. After three years away, the city's silhouette was both comforting and strange—just like the feeling in my chest. Three years of caring for my grandfather in his final days, three years away from the life I'd built with Mason. I should have felt nothing but relief to finally be home.
Yet something felt wrong even before the taxi pulled up to our mansion's circular driveway.
"Welcome back to Seattle, ma'am," the driver said, helping with my luggage.
I tipped him generously and turned to face the three-story Victorian home Mason and I had purchased together. The garden looked different—the roses I'd planted replaced by exotic orchids I didn't recognize. Small changes that sent a chill down my spine despite the mild spring evening.
When my key didn't work in the front door, the chill intensified. I rang the doorbell, listening to its familiar chime echo through the house that suddenly felt like it belonged to someone else.
The door swung open, and I froze.
A woman stood there—tall, slender, with caramel skin and almond-shaped eyes that widened slightly at the sight of me. She wore silk pajamas. My silk pajamas.
"Can I help you?" she asked, her voice silky smooth, one hand absently stroking the fur of Whiskers, my Russian Blue cat.
My gaze dropped from her face to her neck, where a familiar emerald pendant glinted in the porch light. My mother's necklace—the only thing I had left of her, the piece she'd placed in my hands before cancer took her when I was twelve.
"Who are you?" I managed, my voice barely above a whisper. "And why are you wearing my mother's necklace?"
"Oh!" She touched the emerald pendant with perfectly manicured fingers. "You must be Emilia. Mason mentioned you might be coming back soon."
Might be coming back? To my own home?
"Sariyah? Who is it?" Mason's voice called from inside before he appeared behind her. My husband of five years looked exactly as I remembered—tall, broad-shouldered, with dark hair and the confident stance of someone who believed the world revolved around him. His expression shifted from annoyance to surprise when he saw me.
"Emilia," he said, recovering quickly. "You didn't tell me you were arriving today."
"I wanted to surprise you," I replied coldly. "Clearly I'm the one who's been surprised."
Mason ushered me inside with a stiff hug that felt like an obligation. The foyer looked different—my grandmother's antique mirror replaced by a modern abstract painting, the warm beige walls now painted stark white.
"Mason," I said when we reached our bedroom—where I found women's clothing I didn't recognize hanging beside his in our closet. "Who is that woman, and why is she wearing my mother's necklace?"
"That's Sariyah Hill. She's a friend who needed a place to stay," he replied dismissively, not meeting my eyes. "As for the necklace, I let her borrow it. It's just an item, Emilia."
Just an item. The necklace my dying mother had pressed into my small hands, telling me that whenever I wore it, she would be with me. The necklace I'd worn at our wedding, the necklace I'd only removed because the clasp needed repair before my trip.
"A friend," I repeated, noticing how Sariyah's perfume lingered in our bedroom. "And you gave her my clothes too? My cat?"
"You've been gone for three years," Mason said, his tone hardening. "What did you expect? That everything would be exactly as you left it? Life moved on, Emilia."
"Apparently so did you," I whispered, the truth dawning on me with sickening clarity.
Dinner was Mason's idea—a twisted attempt at normalcy as the three of us sat at my grandmother's mahogany table. I picked at my food while Sariyah chatted about her modeling career and recent trips to Paris, her fingers occasionally touching the emerald at her throat.
"Some people get too attached to material things," she said with a pointed look at me when she caught me staring at the necklace. "Don't you think, Mason?"
"Absolutely," he agreed, smiling at her with a warmth he hadn't shown me since my return. "Emilia has always been unreasonably possessive, especially after being away so long."
I set down my fork, the metal clattering against fine china. In that moment, looking at my husband defending another woman in my home, wearing my mother's necklace, I knew with absolute certainty: my marriage was over.
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