
The Divorce He Begged For
Chapter 2
Ryker's phone was still face-down on the nightstand when my alarm went off at 5:45 AM.
I hadn't slept. Not really. I'd lain in that gray darkness watching the minutes change on the clock, my brain looping the same five words on repeat.
Is she asleep yet.
Who said that to their brother? Who needed to know if his wife was unconscious before they could talk?
I slid out of bed without waking him. He grunted, rolled, settled deeper into the pillow. His phone stayed exactly where he'd left it. A black rectangle full of secrets I wasn't supposed to see.
The hallway was silent. Noah's door stayed closed. I padded downstairs on bare feet, the hardwood cold underneath, and the house felt different in the early dark. Bigger. Emptier. Like a stage set waiting for the actors to show up.
I hit the kitchen light. The granite island stretched out cold and gray. I reached for the coffee maker—
The smart speaker on the counter chimed.
"New voice message," it announced in that cheerful, automated voice. "From: Jade."
My hand froze in midair.
The speaker had a glitch. It picked up signals meant for other devices in the house sometimes. Ryker had synced all the family phones to the system months ago. A convenience that suddenly felt like a security breach.
Jade's voice filled my kitchen, warm and intimate, like she was standing right beside me.
"Hey. Noah told me today he wishes I could move in permanently. Isn't that the sweetest thing? He's such a special little guy. I really think I'm making a difference with him. Talk soon."
The message ended. The speaker chimed again, pleased with itself.
I stood there, nails pressing crescent moons into my palms.
Permanently.
She wanted to move in permanently. And my son—the boy I'd carried for nine months, whose first word had been mama—was asking for it.
I didn't turn the speaker off. I let her voice hang in the air. Let it fill the space that was supposed to be mine.
Footsteps on the stairs.
Ryker appeared in the doorway, hair mussed, wearing the gray T-shirt he slept in. His eyes went to the speaker. Then to me. Something flickered across his face. Recognition. Calculation. It was gone before I could name it.
"What was that?"
"Jade." I kept my voice level. "Voice message. Must have hit the wrong device."
He moved past me toward the coffee maker. His shoulder brushed mine. The contact felt accidental. Maybe it was.
"She's just talking," he said, reaching for a mug. "You know how she is. She loves Noah. She's enthusiastic."
"She wants to move in permanently."
Ryker's hand stilled on the cabinet handle.
For a beat, neither of us moved.
Then he exhaled and pulled the mug down. "She's not moving in permanently. She's staying temporarily. You know that."
"Do I?"
He turned. His jaw was tight. "What does that mean?"
I looked at him. Really looked. At the man I'd married eleven years ago in a garden full of white roses. At the father who'd held Noah for hours when our son was colicky. At the stranger who turned his phone over at night and wouldn't watch fifteen seconds of footage of his own child.
"I'm meeting Priya this afternoon."
The words dropped between us like a stone into still water.
Ryker's expression didn't change. But something in his posture went taut. He knew exactly who Priya was. We'd been friends with her and her husband for years. She'd been at Noah's last birthday party, laughing at his dinosaur cake.
"Priya," he repeated. "The lawyer."
"Yes."
"You're meeting with a family lawyer."
It wasn't a question.
I held his eyes. "Yes."
Three seconds of silence. The coffee maker gurgled behind him, drip by slow drip. The refrigerator hummed. Somewhere outside, a bird started up its morning song.
This was the most honest we'd been in eight months.
Ryker didn't ask why. He didn't argue. He didn't try to stop me.
He turned back to the cabinet, pulled down a second mug, and set it on the counter next to his.
"Okay."
That was it. One word. No fight. No defense.
I should have felt relief.
I didn't.
"Noah's school called yesterday," I said. "They want to meet about his behavioral plan. They're concerned about changes in his home environment."
Ryker's shoulders stiffened. "I'll handle that."
"I'll be there."
"Sloane—"
"I'll be there, Ryker."
He didn't respond. He stood with his back to me, pouring coffee, steam rising between us.
Then more footsteps. Lighter. Faster.
"Daddy!"
Noah burst into the kitchen, hair a tangled mess, pajama shirt twisted to one side. He ran straight to Ryker and wrapped his arms around his father's legs.
Ryker's whole face changed. He dropped into a crouch, scooped Noah up, and for one second I saw the man he used to be. Present. Engaged. Real.
"Hey, buddy. How'd you sleep?"
"Good." Noah pulled back, eyes bright. "Guess what? Auntie Jade said she can pick me up from school today!"
My chest constricted.
Ryker glanced at me, then back at our son. "We'll see, okay? Mom might be busy."
"But Auntie Jade said—"
"I know what she said." Ryker's voice stayed gentle, but something underneath had gone steel. "We'll figure it out."
Noah nodded, satisfied, and squirmed loose to run for the living room.
Ryker stood slowly. He looked at me over our son's retreating back.
"You're really doing this."
I didn't answer. I didn't have to.
Priya's office smelled like leather and good coffee. The waiting room was empty except for me and a fern someone had forgotten to water.
I sat in the corner chair with my bag on my lap and my hands wrapped around a cold brew I'd bought downstairs and hadn't touched. The straw had bite marks down one side from the Uber ride over.
Her assistant said she could squeeze me in between meetings. Fifteen minutes. That was all I had.
The door opened and Priya appeared. Sharp blazer. Sleek ponytail. Heels that announced her before she did. She crossed the room in three strides and pulled me into a hug that was brief but real, and I hadn't realized how much I needed it until her arms were around me.
"Come on back."
Her office was clean lines and professionalism. Desk. Two chairs. A window overlooking the city. No personal photos. No clutter.
I sat. Opened my bag. Started pulling out what I'd brought.
The fifteen-second Ring clip, saved to a USB drive.
Six weeks of text screenshots between Ryker and Jade, printed and highlighted.
Noah's school incident reports.
The email from his teacher.
Priya didn't interrupt. She read each page, expression shifting from professional to troubled to something I couldn't name. When she set down the last sheet, her face was unreadable.
"These are good records," she said quietly. "Documented, timestamped. The video is fuzzy but it shows a pattern. The texts are concerning."
"Concerning how?"
"The tone. The timing." She leaned back. "Brothers and sisters don't text at eleven PM about whether his wife is asleep. That kind of message suggests an intimacy that crosses normal family lines."
I nodded. My throat hurt.
"Physical relationship?" Priya asked.
"I don't know."
"Suspicions?"
"Strong ones."
She was quiet for a moment. Then she opened a folder on her desk and pulled out a clean sheet of paper.
"If you want to file for divorce, this is enough to establish grounds. Infidelity isn't required in Texas, but it can affect alimony and asset division. More importantly—" she tapped the screenshot of Jade's message, "—this woman's presence in the home is relevant to custody."
Custody.
The word hit me like a punch.
My mind flashed to Noah's face that morning. His excitement about Auntie Jade. The green dinosaur on his pillow.
"Priya." My voice cracked. "I don't want a war."
"I know."
"I don't want to take Noah from his father. I just—" I swallowed hard. "I want out. I want my son safe. I want my house back."
Priya's expression softened. She reached across the desk and covered my hand with hers.
"Then we build a case that gives you leverage. Not for war—for negotiation. Primary custody? We can ask for it. The house? We can argue for it. Jade out of Noah's life entirely?" She squeezed. "We can make that a condition."
I stared at the papers spread between us. Evidence of a marriage I'd tried so hard to save.
"And if he fights?"
Priya's smile was thin. Not unkind. Sharp.
"Then we remind him that judges don't look kindly on sisters who text married brothers at midnight."
She pulled out a new folder.
"Let's talk about terms."
My heart staggered.
"First," she said, clicking her pen, "Noah's custody arrangement—"
The words blurred.
I sat in her office, staring at papers I couldn't focus on, and felt the ground shift beneath me.
This was happening.
I was really doing this.
And somewhere in a house that used to be mine, another woman was making breakfast for my son while my husband pretended he didn't see a thing.
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