
My Husband Defended Her and Struck Me Instead
Chapter 1
The kitchen table was still warm from dinner when Calum sat me down. Two plates, half-eaten, sat between us like evidence of a life that had just ended. His hands were folded on the polished mahogany surface, and I noticed — with the strange clarity that comes in moments of absolute devastation — that he was wearing the watch I'd given him for our fifth anniversary. The one engraved with our initials and the coordinates of our first apartment in Brooklyn. He was wearing it while telling me he was leaving.
"Haven, I want a divorce."
He said it the way someone might announce a change in dinner plans. Flat. Declarative. No tremor in his voice, no flicker of doubt in his gray eyes. Just clean, surgical finality. The words hit me like ice water, but it was the tone that hollowed me out completely.
"I've fallen in love with someone else," he continued, as if the first sentence hadn't already destroyed everything. "Selene and I are... we're serious. This isn't a fling. It's what I want."
I stared at his mouth, this mouth that had whispered promises to me in the dark, that had laughed across countless dinners, that now shaped words that were dismantling my entire world. My throat closed up. I couldn't form a single sound.
"My lawyer will send the papers," he said, already standing. "I've taken an overnight bag. I'll be back for the rest of my things when you've had time to... process this."
Process this. As if thirteen years of my life were a business transaction that needed to be filed away.
Behind him, by the door, sat his leather duffel bag — already packed, already waiting. He'd been planning this. He'd been planning his exit while I'd been planning our anniversary dinner next month. The realization hit me like a physical blow, and I had to grip the edge of the table to stay upright.
"Calum," I finally managed, my voice barely a whisper. "Look at me."
He turned back, and for a moment I saw something flicker across his face — not guilt, not love, but something closer to impatience. As if I were a client he needed to manage before moving on to more important business.
"You don't understand," I said, my voice gaining strength as desperation flooded through me. "This is us. This is thirteen years. High school. College. Our first apartment with nothing but that mattress and the coffee maker. The nor'easter when you drove six hours to pick me up from my shift. All of it. You're just... throwing it away?"
He crossed his arms. "Haven, I'm not throwing anything away. I'm making a choice. For my own life. The way you would if you weren't so afraid of being alone."
The cruelty of it stole my breath. I watched him walk to the door, his movements clean and certain, and realized with sickening clarity that he'd already said goodbye to me in his mind. Maybe months ago. Maybe longer.
He paused at the threshold, his hand on the doorknob. "The keys are on the counter. The apartment's in both our names. You can stay as long as you need to figure things out."
Then he was gone, and the silence of our — my — apartment rushed in to fill the space he'd left behind. The smell of the dinner I'd cooked still hung in the air. Two plates, two glasses of wine, the remnants of what I'd thought was just another night in our forever.
I sat there until the food went cold, until the wine turned warm, until the clock on the wall ticked past midnight and I realized I was completely, utterly alone.
At 2:17 a.m., I called Lexi.
"He's gone," I told her when she answered, my voice breaking on the second word. "He's gone and he's not coming back."
"I'm coming over," she said without hesitation, and I heard her already moving, keys jingling, the rustle of fabric as she pulled on clothes.
"I don't know what to do," I whispered into the phone, and the truth of it crashed over me like a wave. I had no idea what to do with a life that didn't revolve around him. I had no idea who I was supposed to be now.
Lexi arrived in twenty minutes, her hair still damp from the shower, her eyes fierce with the kind of love that shows up in the middle of the night without being asked. She found me still at the kitchen table, staring at Calum's empty chair, and she didn't say a word before pulling me into her arms.
"This is not the end of you," she murmured against my hair, holding me tight as I finally started to fall apart. "This is not the end of you, Haven Rose."
But even as she held me, even as the tears came, my mind was already racing ahead. Calum had made his choice, but I could still make mine. I could still fight. I could still win him back.
I didn't sleep that night. How could I? My husband was gone, my marriage was over, and I was already calculating my next move.
Morning came gray and cold, and muscle memory took over. I made two cups of coffee — his black, mine with cream — and set them on the table. One for me, one for the ghost of the life I'd just lost.
I stared at his cup until it went cold, then picked up my phone and started calling. Once. Twice. Seventeen times by noon, each call going straight to voicemail, each rejection a fresh cut.
But I would keep calling. I would keep fighting. Because thirteen years wasn't something you just walked away from. Was it?
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