
My Husband Made Me Apologize to His Dead Mistress
Chapter 3
The founding documents of Burke Media were spread across the mahogany surface of my desk, the thick, cream-colored paper catching the harsh midday light. Across from me, our corporate counsel, Robert, adjusted his wire-rimmed glasses. He looked distinctly uncomfortable.
"You understand the finality of this, Tatum?" Robert asked, tapping a silver pen against Section 4, Paragraph B. "The Morals and Operational Solvency clause. It’s ironclad, but invoking it to unilaterally strip a co-founder of his board seat and equity... it’s a nuclear option."
"It’s the option I built into the foundation four years ago," I said, my voice perfectly level.
I stared at Neil's signature at the bottom of the page. The ink was looped and hurried. He had been nineteen when he signed it, too dazzled by the title of CEO to read the dense legal architecture I had constructed to protect us. To protect me. He had trusted that I would always be his safety net.
"He has no operational power once I sign this?" I asked.
"None," Robert replied, a slight hesitation in his throat. "His shares revert to non-voting status. His access to company capital is frozen. He is, for all intents and purposes, an employee you have just terminated. But Tatum, if he fights this in court—"
"He won't have the money to hire a lawyer," I interrupted, pulling the document toward me. "And by tomorrow, he won't have the reputation to borrow it."
I uncapped my pen and signed my name. The ink bled into the paper, a dark, irreversible finality.
Robert packed his briefcase in silence and left. The heavy glass door clicked shut behind him, leaving me alone in the sterile quiet of my office.
I let out a slow breath, but the exhalation caught on a sudden, vicious hook under my right ribcage.
The pain didn't bloom; it struck. A serrated blade twisting directly into my liver. I gasped, my hands slamming flat onto the mahogany desk as my knees buckled. I slipped out of the leather chair, hitting the carpeted floor hard. The room tilted. A cold, clammy sweat broke out across my forehead, and the metallic taste of copper flooded my mouth.
*Six months.* Sylvia’s voice echoed in the ringing of my ears. My body was keeping its own grotesque schedule.
On the desk above me, my cell phone began to vibrate. The cheerful, rhythmic marimba tone cut through the suffocating silence.
I dragged my arm up, my fingers blindly grappling for the phone. Through blurred vision, I read the caller ID. *Mom.*
I squeezed my eyes shut. Another wave of agony rolled through my abdomen, so intense it stole the air from my lungs. I bit down on the inside of my cheek until I tasted blood, forcing the pain into a tight, manageable box in the back of my mind. I pressed accept.
"Hi, Mom," I said. My voice was a flawless, melodic lie.
"Tatum, sweetheart!" Daisy’s voice was warm, thick with the easy comfort of a woman tending to a quiet life. "I hope I’m not catching you in a meeting. I just had to tell you—the hydrangeas finally bloomed. You were right about the soil acidity."
I pressed my forehead against the base of the desk. My knuckles were bone-white where I gripped the carpet. "I told you, Mom. Coffee grounds. They work every time."
"You always know how to fix things," she hummed happily. "How are you, honey? You sound a little breathless. Is Neil working you to death again?"
My throat closed. A phantom pressure rested on my chest, heavier than the failing organ beneath it. She didn't know. She was sitting in her sunlit kitchen, completely unaware that the daughter she was speaking to was already a ghost.
"Just running between offices," I forced a light, airy laugh, though my jaw trembled violently. "Everything is perfect, Mom. I'm taking care of it."
"Well, don't forget to take care of yourself. I love you, Tatum."
"I love you too," I whispered.
I ended the call and let the phone drop. I lay on the floor for twenty minutes, waiting for the fire in my blood to recede to a dull ache, staring at the ceiling and gathering the pieces of myself back into something weaponized.
By midnight, the office was a tomb. The only light came from the blue glare of my dual monitors.
I logged into the *Neil & Tatum* Instagram account. The follower count sat at an even 1.2 million. Millions of eyes that worshipped the boy with the golden smile. Millions of strangers who believed in the fairy tale I had meticulously storyboarded.
I opened a new draft. I didn't write a long, emotional caption. Anger was cheap; cold, hard data was expensive.
*Slide 1:* A factual, dispassionate summary of the last three months. The emotional abuse. The gaslighting. The shrine in my living room.
*Slide 2:* The timestamped hotel receipts, charged to a secret credit card I had found during my financial audit. Two years of weekly bookings.
*Slide 3:* The medical billing record from Celeste Harvey’s obstetrician, forwarded to Neil’s private email just weeks before the crash.
*Slide 4:* An audio file.
I dragged the MP3 into the upload box. It was the recording I had taken on my phone the night Neil came home blind drunk, sobbing into the bathroom tiles. I hit play just to hear it one last time.
*"She was pregnant, Tatum,"* Neil’s slurred, weeping voice filled the dark office. *"It was mine. I killed them both. You have to tell me it wasn't my fault. Please, tell me it's your fault. I can't carry it."*
I stopped the playback. The silence rushed back in, heavy and expectant.
My finger hovered over the mouse. My hand was perfectly steady.
I clicked *Publish*.
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