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Seamstress Rejects Ex-Husband's Desperate Plea Novel Cover

Seamstress Rejects Ex-Husband's Desperate Plea

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.
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Chapter 2

The county seat looked nothing like home. Buildings rose three and four stories high, their brick facades weathered by decades of rain and exhaust fumes. Cars honked impatiently at intersections where I stood frozen, clutching my suitcases, trying to remember which direction the real estate agent had said to go.

The storefront I'd rented sight unseen—because I couldn't afford to visit before committing—sat on Maple Street, tucked between a pawn shop with bars on its windows and a laundromat that hummed constantly. The neighborhood wasn't dangerous, the agent had assured me over the phone, just "transitional." I understood what that meant. Poor.

The key stuck in the lock. I had to jiggle it three times before the door finally groaned open, revealing a space that smelled of mildew and abandonment. Dust motes swirled in the afternoon light streaming through grimy windows. Water stains bloomed across the ceiling like bruises. The previous tenant—a cobbler, according to the agent—had left behind a broken chair and what looked like rat droppings in the corner.

I set my suitcases down carefully, as if sudden movements might cause the whole place to collapse. This was it. This was what seven years of savings and a dissolved marriage had bought me. Forty square meters of peeling paint and broken dreams.

For the first hour, I simply stood there, mentally calculating what it would take to make this space presentable. Paint. Lumber for shelving. Better lighting—the single bulb hanging from the ceiling cast more shadows than illumination. A proper worktable. Fabric. Thread. Everything I'd left behind in that house I'd stopped thinking of as home.

I spent that first night on the floor, surrounded by boxes of my sewing supplies, unable to bring myself to unpack them yet. The silence pressed against me differently than it had in our—my—old house. There, silence had meant Colter was out late again, meant I was waiting, always waiting. Here, silence meant only me. Just me.

That's when I finally let myself cry.

I cried for the girl who'd believed love meant sacrifice. For the seven years I'd poured into a marriage like water into sand. For every dress I'd sewn while Colter slept, every bill I'd paid while he pursued his noble teaching career. I cried until my throat burned and my eyes swelled, until the tears stopped coming and I was left hollow and clean.

When dawn broke through those grimy windows, I stood up. I washed my face in the rusty sink in the back room. And I got to work.

The next two weeks blurred into a haze of physical labor that left my muscles screaming. I scrubbed floors until my knees bruised. Painted walls until my arms trembled. I haggled with suppliers for lumber, used my mother's old contacts to source fabric at wholesale prices, installed lighting fixtures by reading instruction manuals three times over.

Abby appeared during my second week, pressing her face against my freshly cleaned window like a child at a candy store. She knocked tentatively, and when I opened the door, she thrust a worn portfolio at me.

"I heard someone was opening a tailoring shop," she said, words tumbling out in a rush. "I can sew. Not as good as you probably, but I learn fast. I'll work for almost nothing if you'll teach me."

She couldn't have been more than nineteen, with eager eyes and callused fingers that told me she knew her way around a needle. I thought of myself at that age, hungry for knowledge, desperate for someone to see my potential.

"What's your name?" I asked.

"Abby. Abby Chen."

I opened the portfolio. Her stitching was uneven but showed promise. She understood fabric grain, knew basic pattern construction. Raw talent waiting to be refined.

"Can you start Monday?" I said.

Her face lit up like I'd offered her the world. Maybe, in a way, I had.

When I finally hung the "Open for Business" sign in my window three days later, my hands shook slightly. I'd transformed the space into something clean and functional, if not beautiful. My sewing machine sat ready on the worktable. Fabric samples lined shelves I'd built myself. Everything I owned, everything I was, concentrated in these forty square meters.

The first customer arrived at noon—an elderly man needing his suit jacket altered. He paid me eight dollars and left without comment.

The second customer came two days later. A young mother with a torn hem. Six dollars.

By the end of that first week, I'd made thirty-two dollars. Not enough to cover rent. Nowhere near enough to justify the risk I'd taken.

Abby arrived Monday morning with a thermos of tea and determination in her eyes. "Where do we start?" she asked.

I looked at my empty shop, at this girl who believed in me for reasons I didn't yet understand, at the life I was building from rubble and stubbornness.

"We start," I said, "by being better than anyone expects us to be."

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