
My Husband Let Her Imitate His Dead Lover
Chapter 2
I woke up at six-thirty, same as every morning. The city was still gray, the sky that particular shade of nothing that Manhattan does so well before the sun commits to anything. I showered, dressed, and made coffee. Black. Scalding. I drank it standing at the kitchen island, my back to the hallway, and waited for the sound of his footsteps.
He appeared at seven-fifteen. Dark suit, blue tie, the one I had bought him three years ago for his birthday. He looked at me with that expression I had memorized—the one that said, 'I see you, but I am not really here.'
I set the folder on the counter between us. Smooth. Level. The way I would place evidence in front of a judge.
'The divorce papers,' I said.
He stopped. His eyes went to the folder. Twelve pages. I had drafted them with the same precision I brought to every case, every motion, every brief. He would find no loopholes. No technicalities. No way back.
He did not touch it.
'You're being reactive,' he said. His voice was flat. Cold. The voice he used for business calls and dinner reservations and the moments when he wanted to create distance without moving.
I kept my hands still on the counter. I had learned long ago that my hands betrayed me when I felt something. Better to keep them flat. Controlled.
'I've been reactive for seven years,' I said. 'This is the first time I'm being deliberate.'
He stared at me. Really looked at me, maybe, for the first time in our marriage. I wondered what he saw. I wondered if he was surprised to find a person there.
'You're upset about Bianca,' he said. 'This isn't the time—'
'Bianca is the least of it.'
He reached for the folder. His fingers were long, elegant, the same hands that had once held mine in college hallways when I was a sophomore and he was a senior and the world was full of possibilities. He slid the folder back across the counter toward me.
'I won't sign these.'
I picked up the folder. I did not argue. I did not try to explain. I simply put it in my bag, checked my watch, and walked to the elevator.
'I have to be in court at nine,' I said. 'We'll talk tonight.'
He did not respond.
---
The clerk's office was busy at two-thirty. Manhattan Family Court never slept—there was always another marriage ending, another life being dismantled and reassembled under the cold light of law. I stood in line behind a woman with a bruise the color of old grapes fading across her cheekbone and a man who kept checking his phone like it held the answers to everything.
When I reached the counter, I smiled at the clerk. She was new—I didn't recognize her. That was good.
'I'd like to file a divorce petition,' I said.
She slid the forms across the counter. I filled them out with the same pen I used in depositions. My handwriting was clear, legible, unemotional. I wrote my name in full—Margo Harvey Crawford, Attorney at Law—and made sure the address was correct. The penthouse. The place I had shared with Callan for seven years.
I wrote his name with the same care I would give to any other defendant.
'Is there a rush on this?' the clerk asked.
'No,' I said. 'But I'd like it processed today.'
She nodded, stamped the papers, and handed me a copy. I folded it carefully and placed it in my bag. Then I pulled out my phone and texted Diana.
*It's filed.*
She would understand. Diana always understood the things I could not say.
---
Diana was at her desk when my text came through. I knew because I could picture her—sharp bob, sharper eyes, the way she tilted her head when she was thinking through an angle. She read my text, set her phone down carefully, and began clearing her calendar. One call at a time. One meeting at a time.
She was methodical. Thorough. She knew what this meant.
---
Callan's phone rang during the board meeting. I knew this because I had set my watch to count down from the moment I filed the papers. Thirty-seven minutes. That was how long it took his attorney to find out and call him.
He answered on the second ring. I could see it in my mind—the way he would excuse himself from the table, step into the hallway, and listen in that perfectly still way of his. He would not interrupt. He would simply absorb the information like a sponge absorbs water.
Eleven minutes later, the board meeting ended. Early. The board members filed out with the slightly unsettled look of people who had witnessed something they were not supposed to see.
Callan called me at 3:42.
I did not answer.
He called again at 3:45.
I did not answer.
He called a third time at 3:48.
I was in a meeting with a client—a woman who had been married for twenty years and was finally brave enough to leave. I was telling her about temporary support orders when my phone vibrated against the table. I ignored it.
'Your husband will try to control the narrative,' I told her. 'That's what men like him do. But you control your own story now.'
---
At six-thirty, Callan walked into the penthouse and found Bianca alone in the living room. She was curled on the sofa—my sofa—scrolling through her phone with the practiced boredom of someone who was waiting to be noticed.
'Where is she?' he asked.
Bianca looked up, and I could imagine the calculation that ran behind her eyes. 'I don't know,' she said softly. 'She came home earlier, went into her room, and closed the door. I thought maybe she was tired.'
He walked to our bedroom—the room we had shared for seven years, the room where I had lain awake beside him night after night listening to his breathing and wondering if he was dreaming of her.
The door was locked.
He tried the handle once, then again. The sound of it turning, failing, turning again.
On the other side of the door, I sat on the edge of the bed and listened. My bag was packed. My attorney's copy of the divorce petition was on the nightstand. The folder was back in my hands.
I heard his footsteps retreat down the hallway.
I heard him stop in the living room.
'Margo?' he called.
I did not answer.
He called again, his voice carrying a note I had never heard before—something that might have been panic, if Callan Crawford was capable of such a thing.
I still did not answer.
In the silence that followed, I could hear the city breathing below us. Forty-one floors down, people were living their lives, making choices, building futures they could believe in.
I wondered if I would ever feel that way again.
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