
Love Lost, Freedom Found
Chapter 2
I waited until Seth left for work the next morning before I allowed myself to cry. The diary entries burned in my mind like acid—each word a confirmation of what I'd always suspected but never wanted to believe. Ten years of marriage, and I was nothing but an obligation.
My hands trembled as I opened my laptop. The search bar stared back at me, empty and judgmental. I typed slowly: "divorce procedures."
The results were overwhelming. Forms, fees, legal requirements—so many hoops to jump through. I clicked through several websites, printing pages that explained the process. Each page felt like a small rebellion, a tiny step toward freedom.
"Child support," I read. "Alimony." The words blurred together as I printed another document.
I gathered the papers, folding them carefully before slipping them into my sewing box. No one ever looked in there—not even me, anymore. The needlepoint I'd started for our fifth anniversary had long since been abandoned, another casualty of a marriage that had never really begun.
That evening, I prepared Seth's favorite meal—roast beef with Yorkshire pudding. My stomach still ached from the previous night's episode, but I pushed through it. One last dinner. One last attempt to bridge the chasm between us.
"You're quiet tonight," Seth remarked, cutting into his meat with precision.
I took a deep breath. "I found your diary."
His fork paused halfway to his mouth. "And?"
"And I want a divorce."
Seth chuckled, the sound hollow and dismissive. "Don't be ridiculous, Kira. You're upset about something I wrote years ago."
"Yesterday," I corrected. "You wrote those things yesterday."
He set down his utensils, dabbing his mouth with a napkin. "This is emotional nonsense. I'm not discussing this anymore."
"You can't just ignore it," I said, my voice stronger than I expected. "I know how you feel about me."
"How I feel?" His eyes narrowed. "Let me make something perfectly clear. You have no options here, Kira. No education, no skills, no money. Where would you even go?"
The words stung, but I didn't back down. "I'll figure it out."
Three days later, I saw the job posting at the library—Forensic Assistant, Police Department. The requirements mentioned attention to detail and analytical skills, not degrees or certifications.
I applied anyway.
Detective Marcus Chen looked surprised when I walked into the interview room. His office was cluttered with case files and photographs.
"Mrs. Warren," he said, glancing at my application. "I see you don't have any formal training in forensics."
"No," I admitted. "But I notice things others miss."
He raised an eyebrow, then slid a folder across the desk. "Prove it."
Inside were crime scene photographs—a robbery gone wrong. I studied them carefully, noting inconsistencies in the evidence markers, odd shadows that didn't match the lighting, and a footprint that pointed the wrong direction.
"There," I said, pointing to a smudged partial print near the victim's hand. "That's not the victim's blood. The killer stepped there after the attack."
Detective Chen's expression changed. He leaned forward, suddenly interested. "How can you tell?"
"The blood spatter pattern is wrong for that location," I explained. "And the tread pattern doesn't match the victim's shoes."
He studied me for a long moment before nodding. "You start Monday."
Seth's face went white when I told him. "A forensic assistant? You?"
"I got the job," I said simply.
"This is absurd," he snapped. "You're embarrassing yourself—and me."
"I don't care what you think anymore."
"You need to quit," he demanded, his voice rising. "I won't have my wife working in some glorified lab, playing detective."
"I'm not quitting."
Seth's eyes flashed dangerously. "Then you can forget about any financial support. No money, no house, no nothing."
Owen looked up from his phone. "Mom, you're too old to play detective. Just stay home like normal."
"Watch your tone," I said quietly. "I'm still your mother."
My phone rang—Margaret, probably calling about Sunday dinner. I answered, turning away from the argument.
"Kira, darling," she began. "Are you alright? You sound upset."
"I'm fine, Mom."
"Your father mentioned something about you working at the police department? Is that true?"
I glanced at Seth, who was still glaring at me. "Yes."
"Oh, dear. Are you sure that's... appropriate?"
I straightened my shoulders, feeling something shift inside me. "Yes, Mom. It's appropriate. It's what I want."
As I hung up, I realized my hands weren't shaking anymore. For the first time in ten years, I was standing my ground.
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