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My Husband Defended Her and Struck Me Instead Novel Cover

My Husband Defended Her and Struck Me Instead

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.
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Chapter 5

She told me about the rooftop bar first.

Tribeca. Eight months ago. A place with string lights and a view of the Hudson and the kind of ambient noise that makes everything feel intimate. She described the moment he leaned in — the way he'd looked at her beforehand, certain, already decided — and she said it with such quiet precision that I understood she had rehearsed this. Not out of cruelty. Out of conviction. She believed every word.

'He held my face,' she said. Her hands curved around her latte. 'Both hands. Like I was something he didn't want to drop.'

I sat across from her and did not move.

She told me about the private jokes — references I wouldn't understand, she said, not unkindly, just factually. A shorthand they'd built in eight months that felt, she said, like something that had always existed and they'd only just found it. She told me about the weekend upstate when the leaves were turning, a farmhouse rental, a fireplace, the way he'd laughed at something she said and she'd thought: this is what it's supposed to feel like.

I thought about the nor'easter. Six hours through blinding snow. His face when he walked through the door, windburned and exhausted and looking at me like I was the only fixed point in a moving world.

I thought about the Brooklyn apartment. The mattress on the floor. The coffee maker we'd bought at a bodega because we couldn't afford a real one yet. How we'd lain awake talking until the city outside went quiet, and it hadn't felt like poverty — it had felt like everything.

Selene was still talking.

'I know you had something real with him,' she said. Her voice was warm. Measured. The voice of a woman who had decided, long before this meeting, exactly how reasonable she was going to be. 'I'm not trying to erase that. But what we have — it's easy. It's light.' She paused. 'He deserves to feel that. After everything. Don't you think?'

After everything.

I looked at her hands around the cup. Her nails were clean and short. She wore no jewelry except small gold earrings. She had the appearance of a woman who had nothing to hide because she had already decided that what she'd done was not hiding.

'He deserves to be happy,' she said softly. 'And so do you. Just… not with each other.'

The café noise moved around us — the hiss of the espresso machine, a burst of laughter from a table near the window, the scrape of a chair. I sat in the middle of it and felt something inside me go very, very still.

Not numb. Still. The way a room goes still in the seconds after something breaks.

I stood up. My chair scraped the floor.

Selene looked up at me. Her expression didn't change. Composed. Warm. Utterly in control of the room and everything in it.

'Thank you,' I said. My voice came out flat and clean. 'I have everything I need.'

I walked out.

---

The alley behind the café smelled like wet concrete and garbage. I made it to the wall before my stomach turned over, and I bent forward and lost everything — the coffee I hadn't touched, the nothing I'd eaten that morning, whatever was left of the last three weeks. My hands were braced against the brick and the cold of it went straight through my palms.

I stayed like that for a while. Then I slid down and sat on the curb.

The city moved at the end of the alley. Feet, wheels, the distant percussion of a jackhammer somewhere uptown. Nobody looked in. Nobody stopped.

I sat there for twenty minutes and I thought about the way he'd held her face.

Both hands. Like something he didn't want to drop.

He had held my face like that once. I was seventeen. We were in the back of his car in the school parking lot after a late rehearsal and it was raining and he'd looked at me the same way — certain, already decided — and I had thought: this is it. This is the person.

Thirteen years. And he had taken everything I taught him about how to love someone and used it on her.

I stood up. I brushed off my coat. My hands had stopped shaking.

I walked home.

---

I opened my laptop at the kitchen table at four in the afternoon.

I didn't think about it. Thinking was what I'd been doing for three weeks — thinking and calling and texting and bleeding and swallowing pills and sitting in hospital beds and listening to Lexi tell me the truth I couldn't hear. I was done thinking.

I started with Instagram. I had screenshots — Calum's texts, the ones where he'd told me there was no one else, the ones from two weeks before that where he'd said he loved me, the ones from the night I'd called him from the bathroom floor. I had the timeline I'd pieced together from his calendar, from receipts I'd found, from the dates Selene had just handed me herself over a latte in a midtown café.

I wrote the post in one draft. No edits. I tagged her employer, her professional contacts, the mutual friends who'd smiled at me at dinner parties while she was upstate with my husband watching the leaves turn.

Then Twitter. Then LinkedIn — her professional profile, her curated accomplishments, the carefully managed image of a woman with nothing to hide.

I posted the café account last. Every detail. Her hands around the cup. The way she'd said he deserves to feel that. The specific, deliberate tenderness with which she'd described dismantling my marriage like it was a kindness she was doing us both.

By eight o'clock, the notifications had started.

By ten, they were coming faster than I could read them.

By midnight, Selene Fox's name was attached to words she would not be able to scrub from the first page of a Google search for a very long time.

I closed the laptop.

The apartment was quiet. The divorce papers were still on the counter, unsigned, in their cream envelope. I looked at them for a moment, then looked away.

I went to bed.

I didn't sleep. But I lay in the dark and I felt, for the first time in three weeks, something that wasn't grief or desperation or the sick pull of waiting for a phone that wouldn't ring.

I felt like myself.

Not the self I wanted to be. Not yet. But the self I recognized — the one with edges, the one who didn't go quietly, the one who had loved him completely and been handed a latte and a careful explanation of why that wasn't enough.

Outside, the city hummed its indifferent hum.

I stared at the ceiling and waited for morning.

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