
New Love After Humiliation
Chapter 2
Two AM. The penthouse was silent except for the hum of the refrigerator and Whiskers's soft breathing beside me on the bed. I sat cross-legged on the hardwood floor, my laptop screen casting blue light across my tear-stained face, searching for Spanish tutors with the desperation of a drowning woman reaching for driftwood.
*Maria Santos - Retired High School Teacher - $25/hour - Flexible Schedule*
My fingers trembled as I typed the email. 'Dear Mrs. Santos, I need to learn Spanish quickly. I can meet any time that works for you. Please help me.' I hit send before I could second-guess myself, then immediately started researching verb conjugations, my eyes burning from the screen's glare.
The next morning, I woke at five AM sharp. Clayton wouldn't stir for another two hours—his alarm was set for seven, coffee ready at seven-fifteen, out the door by eight. I had learned his schedule like a survival guide, mapping the safe spaces in our shared existence.
Maria Santos had responded within hours. We would meet every Tuesday and Thursday at the public library, twenty minutes from the penthouse. I told Clayton I was taking up yoga.
'Buenos días,' I whispered to Whiskers, practicing the pronunciation. He blinked his amber eyes and purred, the only audience who didn't judge my clumsy attempts.
Days blurred into weeks. I bought workbooks with cash from the household allowance Clayton deposited monthly—money meant for groceries and incidentals that I stretched to cover my secret education. I hid the books in Whiskers's carrier, behind his food bowls, anywhere Clayton wouldn't look. Spanish podcasts played through earbuds while I pretended to read fashion magazines. I conjugated verbs while arranging flowers, practiced conversations with myself in the mirror.
'Hablar, hablo, hablas, habla,' I whispered, scrubbing dishes with mechanical precision. 'Ser, soy, eres, es.'
Maria was patient, kind. She never asked why I needed to learn so urgently, though I caught her studying the dark circles under my eyes, the way my hands shook when I couldn't remember a word. 'Learning should be joyful,' she said gently during our sixth lesson. 'Why such pressure on yourself?'
I couldn't explain that every Spanish phrase I didn't understand was another day of invisibility, another confirmation that I didn't belong in my own life.
Three months later, I sat across from Clayton at Chez Laurent, the city's most exclusive French restaurant. Evie was there, of course, her black dress making her look like sophisticated shadow beside my navy blue—the same dress I'd worn to the Metropolitan Gala, my only option for formal dinners.
The potential investors, two men from Switzerland, spoke English with Clayton about market projections and quarterly reports. I sipped my water and smiled when appropriate, playing my role as the decorative wife.
Then the appetizers arrived, and Evie leaned toward Clayton with that familiar intimacy that made my chest tighten.
'Esta decoración realmente no pertenece aquí,' she said, her eyes sliding deliberately toward me. *This decoration really doesn't belong here.*
My fork froze halfway to my mouth. I understood. Every word.
Clayton's response was worse than any insult: 'Mejor hablemos de los contratos de Zurich.' *Let's talk about the Zurich contracts instead.* Not a defense, not a correction. Just redirection, as if her comment was merely an inconvenience to navigate around.
My heart hammered against my ribs. This was it—my moment to prove I'd worked, that I'd changed, that I could be part of their world. I opened my mouth to respond in Spanish, to show them I'd spent three months of my life trying to bridge this gap.
'Evie,' Clayton said smoothly, before I could speak, 'what did you think of the Marseille contract terms? En français, peut-être?'
*In French, perhaps?*
Evie's smile was razor-sharp as she seamlessly switched languages. 'Les termes étaient tout à fait acceptables, mais je pense que nous pouvons négocier de meilleures conditions...'
The words blurred together, meaningless sounds that excluded me as effectively as a locked door. Three months of work, of sacrifice, of hope—rendered useless in an instant. They would always move the goalpost. Always find a new language, a new barrier, a new way to remind me I didn't belong.
'Excuse me,' I whispered, standing on unsteady legs. 'I need to use the restroom.'
Neither of them looked up from their French conversation.
In the marble-tiled bathroom, I gripped the sink and vomited, my body rejecting the futility of my efforts along with the expensive appetizer. In the mirror, my reflection looked hollow-eyed and desperate, a woman chasing shadows that would always stay just out of reach.
I returned to the table, sat through the rest of dinner in silence, and began planning my next impossible mountain to climb.
French. I would learn French.
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