
Rejected Father's Last Plea
Chapter 2
One week after Carl's birth, I stood outside what used to be our home—the Victorian townhouse Dane and I had renovated together over two painstaking years. My fingers trembled slightly as I inserted the key into the lock. Behind me, Sarah waited in her car with Carl sleeping peacefully in his carrier, ready for a quick getaway once I'd gathered my essentials.
I wasn't ready to face Dane yet, which is why I'd deliberately chosen mid-morning when he would typically be at the office. All I needed was an hour to collect my personal items, some clothes, and a few irreplaceable design models from my early career. The divorce papers were already being prepared, but this—this was about reclaiming pieces of myself.
The house was quiet as I entered, but something felt immediately wrong. There was an unfamiliar scent in the air—a cloying perfume that wasn't mine. I moved cautiously toward the kitchen, freezing when I heard the clink of silverware against porcelain.
Rosa sat at our breakfast bar, wearing my silk kimono robe—the one Dane had given me on our fifth anniversary. Her dark hair was damp, as if she'd just stepped from our shower. She was eating yogurt from my hand-painted bowl, her bare feet propped casually on another bar stool.
"Oh," she said, looking up with exaggerated surprise. "Mira. Dane said you might stop by... eventually."
I stood perfectly still, my body ice-cold despite the warm June air filtering through the windows.
"You're in my home," I said quietly, "wearing my clothes."
Rosa smiled, twirling her spoon. "Dane said I should make myself comfortable. It's such a cozy place." She stretched, the silk of my robe sliding against her skin. "Though the décor is a bit... outdated. Dane said I could redecorate however I want."
She stood, carrying my bowl to the sink with deliberate slowness. As she passed my workspace in the corner of the kitchen, her hip bumped against the shelf where I kept my ceramic prototypes—the first design models I'd ever created before putting my career on hold to help build our company.
The delicate spiral structure I'd spent weeks perfecting teetered, then crashed to the hardwood floor, shattering into dozens of pieces.
"Oops," Rosa said, not bothering to hide her smirk. "Accidents happen."
I felt something shift inside me—not the breaking I'd experienced in the hospital, but something hardening, crystallizing. Without a word, I pulled out my phone and took several photos of the broken ceramic, then of Rosa standing there in my robe, surrounded by the evidence of her deliberate destruction.
"What are you doing?" she demanded, her smirk faltering.
"Documenting," I replied calmly. "For the courts."
I stepped carefully around the broken ceramic and moved toward the stairs. "Enjoy your breakfast, Rosa. Your time in this house will be very short."
I packed methodically, taking only what I absolutely needed, photographing anything that had been moved or damaged. In our bedroom, I found her clothes hanging in my closet, my designer pieces pushed to one side like discards. More photos. More evidence.
When I came back downstairs, Rosa was on the phone, her voice low and urgent. She fell silent when she saw me.
"Calling Dane?" I asked, my voice steady. "Tell him I said thank you."
"For what?" she asked suspiciously.
"For making this so easy." I gestured around the house. "For showing me exactly who he is before I wasted any more years. And for giving me all the ammunition my lawyer will need."
I left without looking back, my suitcase rolling behind me, the weight of my broken model carefully wrapped in tissue paper inside my purse. As I slid into Sarah's waiting car, I felt oddly calm.
"You okay?" Sarah asked, eyeing my face worriedly.
"No," I admitted, glancing at my sleeping son in the back seat. "But I will be."
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