
My Husband Dove Past Me to Save His Mistress
Chapter 2
The drive to Connecticut was quiet. I rolled the windows down and let the crisp autumn wind bite my cheeks. In the backseat, my golden retriever, Barnaby, stuck his head out the window and caught the breeze. He looked as happy as I felt.
When we reached New Haven, I unpacked my two suitcases in my new apartment. It was small. The floorboards creaked under my boots. But it was mine. I didn't have to share it with a man who looked right past me.
I dropped a fluffy dog bed in the corner of the bedroom. Barnaby sniffed it, wagged his tail, and immediately jumped onto my mattress instead. I smiled and let him stay. Axel used to hate Barnaby. “Keep that mutt off the Italian leather,” he would snap. He always made Barnaby sleep in the cold laundry room. Not anymore. Here, Barnaby was family.
I pinned my Yale Ph.D. acceptance letter to the fridge. I traced the university seal with my finger. Tomorrow, my real life would begin.
By Wednesday evening, I was already deep into my research. The university lab was quiet after hours. It smelled of sharp antiseptic and old books. I sat at a stainless-steel workbench, organizing my data on holistic cellular regeneration. Barnaby was curled up under my stool, chewing quietly on a rubber toy.
The heavy lab door clicked open. I didn't look up, assuming it was the janitor.
“You’re playing it too safe in your conclusion.”
The voice was deep, smooth, and calm. I snapped my head up. A man stood near the doorway. He wore a simple black turtleneck and dark slacks, but his posture screamed old money. He had sharp, intelligent eyes that didn't just look at me; they read me.
“Excuse me?” I asked, my voice tight. My grip on my pen tightened. I was used to defending my space.
He walked closer. He didn't swagger like Axel. He moved with quiet, deliberate purpose. “I read your undergraduate paper on tissue repair,” he said, stopping a respectful distance away. “Callum White. I’m the lead on the neuro-pathology grant. You must be Edith.”
I stood up and crossed my arms. “I rely on hard data, Mr. White. Not guesswork. My conclusion is exactly as bold as the math allows.”
“Callum,” he corrected softly. A faint smile touched his lips. “And I’m not talking about the math. I’m talking about your theory on emotional trauma slowing physical recovery. You backed down in the final paragraph. You shouldn't have. You were right.”
I blinked. He actually read it. He understood it. Axel used to call my research “a cute little hobby.”
Before I could reply, Barnaby suddenly stirred under my stool. He trotted right up to Callum. My chest tightened. Barnaby was usually terrified of tall men, thanks to Axel’s unpredictable temper.
But Callum didn't flinch. He didn't complain about dog hair on his expensive clothes. He dropped to one knee right there on the hard tiles. He let Barnaby sniff his hand, then scratched the dog right behind the ears. Barnaby leaned his entire body weight into Callum, his tail thumping loudly against the cabinets.
“Good boy,” Callum murmured. He looked up at me, his dark eyes softening. “He’s a good judge of character.”
“Usually, he is,” I said softly. For the first time in three years, I felt a genuine smile touch my lips. There was no tug-of-war here. Just peace.
Later that night, I sat on my small sofa with a hot cup of tea. I turned on my phone to check my university emails. A notification popped up on my screen. One blocked voicemail.
Curiosity got the better of me. I tapped the screen and put it on speaker.
Axel’s voice filled my quiet living room. He sounded terrible. His breath was ragged, and his words were rough and rushed.
“Edith, pick up the damn phone,” he rasped. The background was dead silent. He was in our massive, empty penthouse. “It’s three in the morning and I can’t sleep. I haven't slept since you left. My legs are burning again. The new physical therapist is an absolute idiot. She doesn’t know the pressure points. She doesn't have your hands.”
I stared at the phone. My heart didn't flutter. It just felt cold.
“I know you’re angry,” Axel’s voice continued, dripping with his usual arrogance. “You took the money. Fine. You wanted to make me sweat. But this silent treatment is childish. You’ve made your point. I’ll buy you that lab equipment you kept begging for. Just come home. I’m tired of this tantrum.”
He coughed, sounding exhausted and desperate. “Call me when you're done pouting, Edith. I need you to fix my legs.”
The voicemail clicked off.
I sat there in the quiet. He didn't apologize for leaving me to drown in the freezing ocean. He didn't ask if my lungs still hurt. He only cared that his legs ached and his bed was cold. He genuinely believed I would go running back to him, just like I always did.
I looked down at Barnaby. He was fast asleep, his head resting safely on my foot.
I deleted the voicemail. I emptied the trash folder. Then, I turned off my phone and went to sleep.
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