
My Husband Defended Her and Struck Me Instead
Chapter 2
I started showing up at his office on a Tuesday. The gleaming glass tower on Madison Avenue where he'd worked since we moved to Manhattan, where I'd dropped off surprise lunches and met him for after-work drinks, where I'd once felt like I belonged. Now I stood in the marble lobby, clutching my purse like a lifeline, watching the elevator numbers climb to the thirty-second floor.
His assistant, Melissa, saw me first. Her eyes widened with something between pity and panic.
"Haven, I—he's not expecting you. He's in a meeting. Maybe you should call first?"
I shook my head, my throat tight. "I'll wait. I just need five minutes."
But Calum never came down. After forty minutes, Melissa approached again, her voice gentle but firm. "He's asked me to tell you he can't see you today. Maybe another time."
Another time. As if there would be another time.
I left, but I came back the next day. And the day after that.
On the third day, he was crossing the lobby with a client when I called his name. The sound of my voice echoed off the marble, and every head turned. Calum's face went pale, then hard as stone.
"Haven, this isn't the place," he said, his client shifting uncomfortably beside him.
"Then where is the place? You won't answer my calls. You won't see me. I just need to talk to you. I need to understand."
His jaw tightened. "There's nothing to understand. I've made my decision."
Two security guards approached, and Calum nodded toward me without even looking at me. "Please escort Ms. Rose out. She's not supposed to be here."
Not supposed to be here. In the lobby of a building I'd visited dozens of times over the years. The humiliation burned through me as the guards took my arms, not roughly but with unmistakable purpose.
"Ma'am, we'll have to ask you to leave," the taller one said, his grip firm but not cruel.
I looked back over my shoulder as they led me toward the revolving doors. Calum was already walking away, his client at his side, not looking back. The other employees watched from the elevator bank, their faces a blur of curiosity and judgment.
That night, my phone buzzed with a text. One line from Calum: "Please stop. This is embarrassing for both of us."
Embarrassing. I stared at the word until it blurred. Thirteen years of my life reduced to an inconvenience, an embarrassment.
The next day, I started texting him. Long, desperate messages that spilled out of me like blood from a wound. I told him about our first kiss in AP English, how he'd brushed a strand of hair from my face before leaning in. I reminded him of the night we stayed up talking until dawn in our first Brooklyn apartment, the city lights filtering through the thin curtains. I described the nor'easter when he'd driven six hours through blinding snow to pick me up from a late shift, his face windburned and determined when he walked through the door.
I sent him photos — our graduation day, the first Christmas in Manhattan, the beach vacation where he'd proposed. I sent him voicemails, my voice breaking as I tried to make him remember.
"Calum, please. We built a life. We promised each other forever. You can't just throw that away. You can't."
He didn't respond. Not to the texts, not to the photos, not to the voicemails that captured every crack in my voice. For three days, nothing.
Then his lawyer called. Not Calum — his lawyer. A crisp, professional woman who spoke in the language of legal proceedings and clean breaks.
"Mrs. Turner has instructed me to inform you that the divorce papers will be delivered by Friday. She hopes you'll sign them without contest to expedite the process."
Mrs. Turner. Not Haven. Not the woman he'd promised to love forever. Just Mrs. Turner, the obstacle to his new life.
I hung up without saying a word.
Lexi found me like that — sitting on the kitchen floor, surrounded by old photographs, my phone clutched in my hand like a lifeline that had just been cut. She didn't knock. She never did. She just opened the door and took in the scene: me, cross-legged on the cold tile, surrounded by the artifacts of a life that was slipping away.
She moved through the room carefully, picking her way through the scattered memories, and sat down beside me. She picked up a photo — Calum and me on our honeymoon, his arm around my waist, both of us squinting into the Mediterranean sun.
"God, you were happy," she said softly.
"We were happy," I corrected, my voice hollow.
Lexi set the photo down and looked at me, her eyes clear and steady. "Haven, listen to me. He's already gone. You're grieving a man who's still alive and doesn't want to come back. This—" she gestured to the photos, the phone, the mess of my desperation, "—isn't going to bring him back."
The truth of her words hit me like a physical blow. "You don't understand," I whispered.
"I understand more than you think. I understand that you're destroying yourself for someone who's already moved on. I understand that I'm watching my best friend disappear, and I can't stand it anymore."
She was right. I knew she was right. But knowing didn't make it hurt any less.
"Just go," I said, not looking at her. "I need to be alone."
Lexi stood, her movements careful, deliberate. "I'll go, but I'm not going far. Call me when you're ready to fight for yourself instead of him."
She left, and I was alone again with the photographs and the silence and the growing certainty that I was losing more than just my husband. I was losing myself.
But I couldn't stop. Not yet. Not until I'd tried everything. Even if it killed me.
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