
My Husband Missed Our Daughter’s Birthday for His Mistress
Chapter 2
I didn't sleep that night. Instead, I sat at our kitchen table with my laptop open, the blue light illuminating my face in the darkness. My fingers moved with quiet purpose across the keyboard as I searched for family attorneys who specialized in high-net-worth divorces. By dawn, I had found three possibilities and scheduled consultations with each one, spreading them across different days so Brayden wouldn't notice my absence from home.
Two days later, I sat across from Diane Winters, a sharp-eyed attorney whose office overlooked Central Park. She listened without interruption as I explained my situation, occasionally making notes in a leather-bound notebook. When I finished, she looked at me with something like approval.
'You've done your homework,' she said, tapping her pen against the desk. 'Most people come to me crying. You're coming to me with evidence. That's smart.'
I smiled thinly. 'I'm not here to cry. I'm here to dismantle.'
She nodded once, decisively. 'Then let's get started.'
The next forty-eight hours passed in a blur of quiet, methodical action. While Brayden was at the office, I transferred our personal documents from the shared filing cabinet to a new folder in my personal cloud storage. I collected Penny's school records, her medical files, and the family photos I knew we would want to keep. Each night, I backed up another section of my digital life—my professional credentials, my old client contacts, the articles I'd published before I'd stepped back to become a full-time mother.
On the third day, I found a rental listing online: a modest two-bedroom apartment in a safe neighborhood with good schools nearby. The building wasn't glamorous—nothing like our Manhattan high-rise—but it was clean, secure, and most importantly, it was mine. I used my personal savings account to pay the deposit and first month's rent, signing the lease under my own name.
'Why are you doing this?' the property manager asked as she processed my application. 'You seem like you could afford something nicer.'
I looked up from the paperwork, my pen hovering over the signature line. 'I'm not looking for a lifestyle upgrade,' I said quietly. 'I'm looking for autonomy.'
That evening, while Brayden worked late—or so he claimed—I began packing Penny's room. I didn't take everything; I wasn't trying to hurt her. But I carefully selected the books she loved, her favorite stuffed rabbit, Gerald, and the small jewelry box that had belonged to my grandmother. I wrapped each item with care, packing them into boxes labeled in my neat handwriting.
'Mommy?' Penny's voice startled me. She stood in the doorway, her hair mussed from sleep, wearing the pajamas with stars and moons that Brayden had given her last Christmas. 'What are you doing?'
I closed the box I was working on and sat back on my heels, looking up at her. 'I'm just organizing some things, sweetheart.'
She padded over to me, her small hand coming to rest on my shoulder. 'Are we going somewhere?'
I reached up and covered her hand with mine. 'Yes,' I said simply. 'We're going to start a new chapter.'
She nodded, accepting this with the resilience of children who have learned to adapt. 'Can I bring Gerald?'
'Of course you can,' I smiled. 'Gerald is coming with us.'
The next morning, while Brayden was at his weekly breakfast meeting with investors, I loaded the last of our essential belongings into my car. Penny sat in her car seat, clutching Gerald to her chest, her face solemn but unafraid. As we pulled away from the curb, I didn't look back at the building. There was nothing there for me anymore.
Our new apartment felt smaller, but somehow more real. I spent the afternoon helping Penny arrange her new room, watching as she placed her books on the shelf and hung her clothes in the closet. When she was satisfied, she announced she was hungry, and we ordered takeout from a local Italian place that smelled of garlic and possibility.
After Penny was asleep that night, I opened my laptop. My fingers hovered over the keyboard for a moment before I began to type. I navigated to the folder where I'd stored years of translation work for Brayden's firm—pitch decks, contract negotiations, international client communications. Work I'd done for free, believing I was supporting our family, when really I was simply supporting him.
One by one, I deleted the files. The Japanese pharmaceutical deal. The Singapore tech acquisition. The Brazilian manufacturing contract. Each deletion felt like cutting a cord, severing a connection that had kept me tethered to a man who had never seen my worth.
When the folder was empty, I opened my email and began to type a new message. The subject line read: 'Invoice for Professional Services Rendered.' I attached a meticulously prepared document that itemized every project, every hour, every deliverable I'd contributed to Brayden's company over the years. The total came to $140,000—the market rate for my services, nothing more, nothing less.
I addressed the email to Brayden's CFO, to Marcus Hale, and to Brayden himself. My finger paused over the send button for just a moment before I pressed it, releasing the message into the digital ether.
The next morning, my phone rang. It was Marcus Hale, his voice tight with controlled tension. 'Lucia,' he said, 'we need to talk about this invoice.'
'I think it speaks for itself,' I replied calmly. 'But I'm happy to discuss the details.'
There was a pause on the other end of the line. 'This isn't just about the money,' Marcus said finally. 'This is about the work. The deals. The clients.'
I smiled to myself, watching the morning light filter through the blinds of my new apartment. 'Yes,' I said softly. 'It is.'
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