
Wife Leaves Her Unfaithful Husband for a New Start
Chapter 1
I smoothed the emerald silk dress over my knees, the same one Soren had once said made my eyes sparkle like jewels. That compliment felt like it belonged to another lifetime now. The candlelight at Skyline Restaurant cast a warm glow across the white tablecloth, illuminating the single glass of wine I'd been nursing for the past hour.
Around me, couples leaned into each other, sharing intimate conversations and laughter. A woman at the next table threw her head back in delight at something her partner said, her diamond engagement ring catching the light. I checked my phone for the twelfth time in thirty minutes.
No messages. No missed calls.
"Would you like to order now, ma'am?" The waiter approached with practiced sympathy in his eyes.
"Just a few more minutes, please. My husband is running late." I forced a smile that didn't reach my eyes. "He's caught up with work."
The waiter nodded, too professional to show the pity I knew was there. "Perhaps some appetizers while you wait?"
"Yes, that would be fine." I ordered something I wouldn't have to eat alone—a plate we could share when Soren arrived.
But the appetizers came and went. I ordered a main course, then dessert, creating a one-woman performance of someone who wasn't being stood up on her anniversary. Each time the restaurant door opened, my heart leapt, only to sink again when strangers walked through.
Three hours had passed when a delivery person in a black jacket approached my table.
"Mrs. Carter?" he asked, holding a single to-go coffee cup.
"It's Brooks," I corrected automatically, though I'd stopped doing that months ago. "Mrs. Brooks-Carter."
He handed me the cup with an apologetic shrug. Attached was a hastily scribbled note on Carter Capital letterhead:
*Meg—Urgent client presentation that couldn't wait. Don't hold dinner. See you at home. —S*
No mention of our anniversary. No apology. Just a lukewarm coffee that tasted of obligation.
I paid the bill, ignoring the waiter's sympathetic glance, and left with as much dignity as I could muster.
* * *
Our penthouse was dark when I arrived home just after 10 PM. I kicked off my heels in the marble-floored foyer, the sound echoing through the empty space. This place had never felt like mine—it was a showpiece for Soren's success, all chrome and glass and expensive minimalism.
I moved through the kitchen, noticing Soren's laptop still warm on the counter. Carmen Hill's project files glowed on the screen—complex spreadsheets and a PowerPoint titled "Henderson Acquisition Strategy." My fingers hovered over the keyboard, tempted to search for more, but I pulled back.
When had I become this person? The wife who wanted to snoop through her husband's computer?
I opened the trash can to throw away the coffee cup and froze. Inside were takeout containers for two—his favorite Thai place, with remnants of pad thai and green curry. Two sets of disposable chopsticks.
My stomach twisted as I made my way to the bedroom, unfastening my earrings—the ones he'd given me on our first anniversary, when things were different. When I still believed I mattered.
Soren's jacket lay draped across our bed. I picked it up to hang it properly—another small act of care he'd never notice—when something fell from the pocket. Two movie ticket stubs for a 7:15 showing of "Love in London," a romantic comedy I'd mentioned wanting to see weeks ago.
My hands trembled as I turned over the receipt that had fallen with them. Popcorn. Two drinks.
I sat on the edge of our bed, still clutching the evidence of my husband's evening. Not an urgent client presentation. A movie. With someone else. On our anniversary.
The front door opened at 12:20 AM. I heard Soren's keys hit the console table, his shoes being kicked off. I waited in the foyer, the ticket stubs clutched in my hand, watching as he loosened his tie.
"Meg," he startled, noticing me in the dim light. "You're still up."
"How was the movie?" I held up the ticket stubs.
His expression shifted from surprise to irritation in an instant. "You went through my pockets?"
"You left your jacket on our bed." I kept my voice steady despite the earthquake happening inside me. "On our anniversary, Soren. Our third anniversary."
He ran a hand through his hair, exhaustion evident in the gesture. "You're making something out of nothing. After the presentation, Carmen needed to decompress. The movie theater was right there. It was just convenient stress relief."
"On our anniversary," I repeated, each word carefully measured.
"Christ, Megan." His voice hardened. "Do you have any idea what kind of pressure I'm under? Building this business? Making sure we can maintain all this?" He gestured around at our expensive home. "You're being unreasonable. Maybe if you had your own interests, your own life, you wouldn't fixate on a harmless movie."
The words hit like physical blows. Unreasonable. Fixate. As though I was the problem.
"I was sitting alone at Skyline for three hours," I said quietly.
"And I sent coffee," he countered, as if that balanced the scales.
In that moment, looking at his defensive posture and the complete lack of remorse in his eyes, something inside me finally broke.
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