
Seamstress Rejects Ex-Husband's Desperate Plea
Chapter 1
I knew something was wrong the moment Colter walked through the door. For seven years, he'd brought me warm milk before bed—a small gesture that had become our nightly ritual. Tonight, his hands were empty except for a manila envelope clutched tightly in his right fist.
The kitchen light cast harsh shadows across his face as he stood there, not quite meeting my eyes. I set down my needle and the dress I'd been altering for Mrs. Patterson's granddaughter.
"Sarah," he said, his voice oddly formal. "We need to talk."
I wiped my hands on my apron and gestured to the chair across from me. "What is it?"
He placed the envelope on the table between us, his fingers lingering on it as if reluctant to let it go. "I've been offered a position. In Seattle. A real opportunity, at a prestigious school."
My heart lifted for a moment—we'd talked about moving to a bigger town someday, where I might open a proper shop instead of working from our front room. "That's wonderful news, isn't it?"
His eyes finally met mine, and the coldness there made my blood run still. "It comes with conditions."
That's when he slid the envelope toward me. I didn't need to open it to know what it contained. Divorce papers. The word hung in the air between us, unspoken but deafening.
"Melany Wagner," he continued, his voice taking on a rehearsed quality, "has connections on the school board. She's arranged everything, but..."
"But she wants you for herself," I finished, my voice surprisingly steady.
Colter nodded, relief flickering across his face at not having to say it himself. "She needs to be my wife. On paper. For her social standing."
I almost laughed at the absurdity. "And our seven years together? What was that?"
"A phase," he said, the word cutting through me like a blade. "I need advancement, Sarah. Opportunities. You've always understood my ambitions."
I sat there, feeling the weight of every sacrifice I'd made. Every late night spent sewing to pay our bills while he pursued his teaching dreams. Every dream of my own I'd set aside. I thought of the nights I'd fallen asleep waiting for him to come home from school functions, the warm milk growing cold on the nightstand.
"I see," was all I said.
He seemed taken aback by my calmness, perhaps expecting tears or pleas. Instead, I reached for the envelope and opened it, scanning the legal document that would dissolve our marriage as if it had never existed.
"Do you have a pen?" I asked.
He fumbled in his pocket, producing a sleek fountain pen—new, expensive, not something we could have afforded on our budget. A gift from Melany, no doubt.
I took it without comment and signed my name on each marked line. Sarah Meyer. Soon I would be just Sarah Meyer again, as if Colter Shaw had never happened.
"That's it?" he asked, sounding almost disappointed. "You're not going to fight for us?"
I looked up at him then, really looked at the man I'd loved for seven years. "There's no 'us' to fight for if you're already gone."
The night passed in a strange, detached haze. Colter slept on the couch while I lay awake in our bed, mentally cataloging what belonged to me and what I would leave behind. By morning, I had packed my clothes, my sewing supplies, and the small box of jewelry that had been my mother's. Everything else—the furniture we'd scraped to buy, the curtains I'd sewn, the life we'd built—I would leave for him to explain to Melany.
Colter hovered awkwardly as I moved through the house one last time, perhaps waiting for the emotional breakdown that never came.
"Where will you go?" he finally asked as I stood at the door, my two suitcases beside me.
"To say goodbye to Mrs. Patterson," I replied simply. "Then to the county seat. I've been saving to open a shop there someday."
His expression flickered with surprise. I'd never told him about those savings—my own small secret, my dream tucked away for a future I'd always imagined would include him.
Mrs. Patterson's eyes filled with tears when I told her I was leaving. Unlike Colter, she understood immediately what this meant.
"You've always been too good for this town," she said, embracing me tightly. "And too good for him, though he never saw it."
At the town hall, the divorce was a sterile, fifteen-minute affair. The clerk stamped our papers with bureaucratic efficiency, barely looking up from her desk. Seven years of marriage, dissolved in less time than it took to bake a loaf of bread.
Colter stood beside me, rigid and formal in a suit I'd altered for him last Christmas. When it was done, he cleared his throat as if to speak, but I turned away before he could find the words.
I walked out of the town hall alone, my wedding ring tucked into my pocket, feeling strangely light despite the weight of all I carried.
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