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My Mother Paid Me to Leave Him Novel Cover

My Mother Paid Me to Leave Him

The invitation arrived on heavy cream cardstock, embossed with gold lettering that caught the afternoon light streaming through my apartment window. Lucille Greene cordially invites you to celebrate her marriage to Frederick Carroll. I traced the gold letters with my fingertip, feeling nothing but the hollow obligation that had defined our relationship for as long as I could remember. Four years since I'd last seen Spencer, and now I was about to walk into his family's world—wearing a dress I'd borrowed from Nylah because I couldn't justify buying something new for a mother who'd abandoned me when I needed her most. The rooftop venue of The Celestial was draped in white peonies and crystal chandeliers that refracted Manhattan's skyline into a thousand glittering points. I arrived alone, clutching a small gift bag that felt inadequate in this ocean of wealth. The maître d' led me through tables of people whose jewelry could have paid off my medical school loans, and I felt the familiar tightness in my chest—the one that came whenever I remembered how far I was from the world I'd once shared with Spencer. I was halfway to my assigned seat when I turned, and there he was. Spencer Carroll stood at the head table beside a man I assumed was Frederick, his father. He wore a tailored charcoal suit that emphasized the broad shoulders and lean build that had filled out since college.
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Chapter 4

The Carroll Foundation gala was held in a glass-walled event space on the forty-second floor of a Midtown tower, the kind of venue where the view did half the work and the lighting did the rest. I arrived in the dress Nylah had helped me pick — navy, simple, nothing that announced itself — and accepted a glass of sparkling water from a passing tray because I was on call in fourteen hours and couldn't afford the blur.

The obstetrics department had sent three of us. I was the most junior, which meant I was the one who stood near the display boards about maternal health initiatives and answered questions from donors who nodded thoughtfully and then moved on to the open bar. I didn't mind. It gave me something to do with my hands.

I spotted Spencer twenty minutes in.

He was across the room with Frederick, working the space the way he always did — unhurried, precise, the kind of presence that made people come to him rather than the other way around. He wore a dark suit, no tie, and he was listening to someone with the focused attention that I knew, from experience, he could turn on and off like a switch. Haisley was at his side in a champagne-colored gown, her hand resting in the crook of his arm with the ease of long practice.

I looked away and answered a question about fetal monitoring.

We orbited each other for two hours. I felt it the whole time — that low-frequency awareness, like a sound just below hearing. When I moved toward the east side of the room, he was already there. When I stepped out onto the terrace for air, I heard his voice behind me ten minutes later, talking to someone from the hospital board. I didn't turn around. I went back inside.

The program started at nine. Round tables, assigned seating, the lights dimming for a keynote address about maternal mortality rates in underserved communities. I found my table and sat down.

Spencer sat down beside me.

I didn't look at him. He didn't look at me. The keynote speaker began, and the room settled into that particular attentive quiet of people who have eaten well and are now prepared to feel briefly moved.

His knee pressed against mine under the table.

Not an accident. The tables were wide enough. He had room.

I kept my eyes on the speaker. My water glass was in front of me and I didn't reach for it because I didn't trust my hands to be steady. His knee didn't move. Mine didn't either. The speaker talked about access and outcomes and the gap between what medicine could do and what it actually did for women who couldn't afford the difference, and I absorbed approximately forty percent of it.

The other sixty percent was the warmth of his leg against mine and the four years of silence sitting between us like a third person at the table.

When the lights came up, he turned to me.

'Good program,' he said.

'Yes,' I said.

That was the whole conversation. He stood, buttoned his jacket, and walked back to where Haisley was waiting with two fresh glasses of wine and a smile that didn't reach her eyes when she looked at me.

I stayed at the table for another minute. Straightened my name card. Breathed.

---

I left at eleven. The car I'd called was three minutes out, and I was standing in the lobby checking my phone when I heard the elevator.

Spencer stepped out alone. His jacket was open, his tie gone. He had the careful, deliberate quality of a man who was managing himself with more effort than usual.

He saw me. He didn't stop walking.

'Your car?' he said.

'Three minutes.'

He nodded and pushed through the revolving door. I followed, because the car would pull up outside and there was nowhere else to go.

We stood on the sidewalk in the November cold, not talking. A cab went by. Someone laughed loudly half a block away. Spencer looked at the street with the focused attention of a man who was not looking at me.

My car arrived. I got in.

I watched him through the window as we pulled away. He was still standing there, hands in his pockets, not moving toward the door.

---

I was in my apartment, shoes off, kettle on, when I heard it.

A sound from the hallway. Low, irregular. I stood still for a moment, then went to my door and opened it.

Spencer was sitting on the floor outside his apartment, back against the wall, one arm resting on his knee. He was looking at his keypad with the expression of a man who had been presented with a problem he found genuinely unreasonable.

He looked up at me.

I looked at him.

Three seconds. Maybe four.

I crossed the hall, crouched in front of his keypad, and punched in the code. His birthday, reversed. Six digits. The lock clicked open on the first try.

He was quiet for a moment.

'How long have you known that?' he said.

'A while,' I said.

I got him up. He was heavier than he looked, or maybe I was more tired than I'd admitted. He didn't lean on me exactly, but he didn't resist either, and we made it through the door and to the couch without incident. I got his shoes off. Found the kitchen, filled a glass with water, set it on the coffee table within reach.

I straightened up and reached for my bag.

His hand closed around my wrist.

Not hard. Just — closed. Like a question he didn't know how to ask out loud.

I should have left. I knew I should have left. I had fourteen hours until my next shift and a kettle going cold across the hall and four years of very good reasons to walk out that door.

I stayed.

I don't know which one of us moved first. I'm not sure it matters. What I remember is the way his hand moved from my wrist to my face, slow and careful, like he was checking whether I was real. What I remember is the sound he made when I didn't pull away — something low and broken, four years of held breath finally releasing.

His hands were in my hair. My back was against the cushions. His mouth found my throat and he said my name, just my name, and it sounded like something that had been locked in a room for a very long time and had finally stopped pretending it wasn't there.

I pressed my hand flat against his chest. His heart was going as fast as mine.

'Spencer,' I said.

He went still. His forehead dropped to my shoulder. We stayed like that, both of us breathing, the city quiet outside the windows.

I didn't tell him why I'd left. Not yet. The words were there — they'd been there for four years — but the timing was wrong, and he was half-drunk, and some truths deserve better than this.

But I didn't leave either.

I stayed until his breathing evened out. Then I sat up, straightened my dress, and looked at him in the low light of his apartment — this man I had loved and lost and moved across the hall from and spent four years pretending I was fine without.

I pulled the blanket from the back of the couch and laid it over him.

Then I let myself out, pulled his door shut behind me, and stood in the hallway for a long moment before I went back to my own apartment.

The kettle had long gone cold. I made the tea anyway.

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