
Stillwater Departure
Chapter 1
"You’re late again."
The words left my mouth before I could soften them. Not accusing, not yet—but sharper than I'd meant.
Ferdinand froze in the doorway, one hand still on the keys dangling from the lock. His coat hung awkwardly on his frame, the collar askew, like he’d thrown it on in a rush.
His smile flickered. “Traffic was a nightmare,” he said, brushing a damp curl from his forehead. “I came straight from the office.”
The lie was subtle, expertly delivered. He didn’t know I noticed how his shoes were dry—bone dry—on a rainy day.
I turned back to the stove, stirring the sauce so fiercely it splattered red across the tile. “I made your favorite. Marinara with the San Marzanos you like.”
Behind me, the sound of him setting his keys in the ceramic dish. The clink was louder than usual.
"You didn’t have to do all this," he said.
I always do, I wanted to say. Every year, every Friday, every time you forget the little things, I’m here making up the difference. But I only smiled, the tight-lipped kind that didn't reach my eyes.
He crossed the kitchen, wrapped his arms around me. His touch was warm but weightless, as if he were already halfway somewhere else.
“You’re tense,” he murmured, pressing his lips to my temple.
"You’re checking your phone a lot tonight." I kept my tone easy, like I hadn’t counted. Three times in five minutes.
"Collins is blowing up the group thread again. The man's a lunatic before presentations." He laughed—too loud, too forced. His hand slid from my waist to my hip, fingers tapping out a jittery rhythm.
He kissed my cheek. It landed flat.
“We still good for tomorrow?” I asked, ladling sauce over steaming pasta. “Maison, seven o’clock.”
“Wouldn’t miss it for the world.”
He smiled too hard, too fast. The kind of smile that says look at me, not look at us.
"Alright. I'm gonna shower before dinner," he added quickly, grabbing his phone again on the way out.
The bathroom door shut with a muffled click.
I set down the spoon and leaned heavily against the counter, my breath catching. For a second, the only sound was the soft bubble of the sauce on the stove and the distant hiss of water from the pipes.
It’s fine, I told myself. He’s planning something. That’s all. He’s distracted because he’s organizing some surprise. That’s what this is.
But then the scent hit me again—perfume. Not mine. Subtle, floral, unfamiliar. And far too expensive for someone who “just worked late.”
I stared at the closed bathroom door. He’s hiding something. And worse, he thinks I’m too naïve to see it.
The next morning, I was in the office early. Too early.
The elevator lights hadn’t even warmed up properly when I stepped out. My shoes echoed through the empty hallway like accusations.
I sat down at my desk, trying to focus. Anything to keep my mind from drifting to last night—his voice, too careful; his eyes, darting when he thought I wasn’t watching.
My inbox pinged. One new message.
From: specialforyou@protonmail.com
Subject: Time to Step Aside, Dear
I stared at it, my hand frozen above the mouse. A familiar tightness seized my chest—like the hush before a tornado.
I clicked it open.
Dear Margot,
You should never miss this.
—E.L.
Attached: one video file.
I hovered my cursor over the play button, breath caught in my throat.
Who the hell is E.L.?
I pressed play.
The footage was grainy, gray-toned. An elevator lobby. Time-stamped: 3:17 PM, two days ago.
Then he appeared.
Ferdinand. Arm slung easily around a woman. Younger. Long dark hair. Her head tipped against his shoulder, laughing like she belonged there.
She spoke.
“Do you think Margot suspects anything?”
Ferdinand smirked. “She’s too busy planning our anniversary dinner. She sees what she wants to see.”
And then—he kissed her. Not a stolen kiss. Not guilty or hesitant. It was intimate. Familiar. Hungry.
My hands flew to the laptop, slamming it shut so fast I nearly cracked the screen.
No… Please. No.
The bile hit me mid-step. I stumbled out of my chair, nearly knocking it over, and half-ran to the restroom.
My knees hit the tile in the last stall. Cold. Hard. Real.
Emma. It had to be Emma Lewis. The new associate he’d mentioned in passing over risotto last month. “Brilliant new hire. Real asset to the team.” He’d said it so casually, like she barely registered.
But she registered now. Oh, she registered.
I pressed my forehead to the stall wall, the metal cool against my burning skin. My breath came in shallow gasps, a high-pitched wheeze building in my throat.
Five years. Five years of calendars color-coded for his benefit. Dinners that took hours. Business cards I arranged by hand at his networking events. Every time I said no to a promotion, to a trip, to anything that would take me away from us.
And here he was. Laughing. Mocking me with her in a hotel hallway.
The pain was hot at first—like fire. Then it went cold.
A strange stillness washed over me. Like the eye of a storm. I stood. Smoothed my skirt. Wiped beneath my eyes with the edge of my thumb.
At the sink, I barely recognized the woman staring back.
But she was still standing.
Back at my desk, I reopened the laptop. Deleted the email. The video. Emptied the trash.
Then I opened my calendar and began stacking meetings like bricks. One on top of another. Enough to bury the morning, the memory, and everything else beneath layers of appointments, calls, and deliverables.
Outside the office window, the city pulsed with indifference.
Five years of marriage. One thousand eight hundred and twenty-five days of building something I thought was real.
And it had taken exactly one minute and thirty-eight seconds of video to reveal to me: what I had built in the past five years was nothing but deadly still water.
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