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"The Wife He Took for Granted" Chapter 2

Sarah barely slept.

The few times she drifted off, she woke convinced she'd imagined the photograph. Then she'd reach for her phone on the nightstand and see it again—the image waiting exactly where she'd left it. Robert standing beneath warm gala lights. Madison beside him. His hand resting comfortably around hers.

Not awkwardly.

Not accidentally.

Comfortably.

By dawn, the photograph had stopped looking like evidence and started looking like a memory everyone else had already accepted.

The coffee tasted burnt that morning. Sarah drank it anyway.

At some point she found herself driving toward Charlotte First Bank.

She didn't tell herself she was looking for answers. The truth felt smaller and far more embarrassing.

She wanted someone to tell her she was wrong.

Someone to laugh and explain that Madison was a client. A business partner. A misunderstanding.

Anything would have been enough.

The lobby looked exactly the same as it always had.

Polished floors. Fresh flowers. The framed photographs celebrating quarterly growth and community awards. Robert loved those photographs. Every time the bank sponsored a fundraiser or won recognition from the Chamber of Commerce, another frame appeared on the wall.

Sarah used to tease him about it.

"You know normal people hang family pictures."

Robert would laugh.

"And miss an opportunity to admire myself?"

She remembered rolling her eyes.

At the time, she'd thought that was one of the things she loved about him.

The memory followed her through the front doors.

The receptionist looked up immediately.

Recognition crossed her face.

Then something else.

Something quicker.

Less welcoming.

"Mrs. Mitchell."

The smile appeared a fraction too late.

Sarah had spent most of her adult life reading children. Reading hesitation. Reading embarrassment. Reading everything people said without words.

The receptionist looked exactly like a student caught cheating on a test.

Sarah approached the desk.

"Good morning."

"Good morning."

The young woman tucked a strand of hair behind her ear and glanced toward the elevators.

Just for a second.

Still long enough.

"I'm looking for Robert."

A pause.

Then:

"Mr. Mitchell isn't in yet."

The answer arrived too quickly.

Prepared.

Practiced.

Sarah nodded politely.

Neither woman said anything else.

The conversation ended, though neither of them officially ended it.

When Sarah finally stepped away, relief flickered across the receptionist's face.

That hurt more than she expected.

Relief meant fear.

Fear meant knowledge.

Knowledge meant she wasn't the first person to ask about Madison.

Not even close.

Near the coffee station, two employees stepped off the elevator.

Sarah recognized both immediately.

One had attended Luke's graduation party.

The other had spent an entire Christmas dinner talking football with Robert.

For a moment, all three of them froze.

Then the conversation stopped.

The laughter stopped.

Even their smiles stopped.

One man suddenly checked his phone.

The other became fascinated by a bulletin board.

Neither looked directly at her again.

Sarah stood there holding a paper cup she didn't remember pouring.

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The realization arrived slowly.

Nobody was surprised to see her.

They were uncomfortable seeing her.

There was a difference.

A painful one.

"Sarah?"

She turned.

Janice Monroe stood near the HR offices.

For years, Janice had occupied that strange space between coworker and friend. She'd attended Thanksgiving dinners. Baby showers. Retirement parties. The sort of person who knew your children by name and remembered your birthday without needing Facebook reminders.

Seeing her should have felt comforting.

Instead, Janice looked like someone approaching a funeral.

Sarah stared at her.

Janice stared back.

Neither smiled.

"How long?" Sarah asked.

Janice closed her eyes briefly.

That was answer enough.

Still, Sarah asked again.

"How long?"

The older woman's shoulders sank.

Not dramatically.

The way people surrender when they're too tired to keep pretending.

"Oh, Sarah."

Sarah laughed softly.

The sound surprised both of them.

"You knew."

Janice swallowed.

"I didn't know what to do."

The answer landed harder than a denial.

Not what to do.

Not whether it was true.

Not whether Sarah should know.

Only what to do.

The decision had never been about facts.

It had been about convenience.

Sarah looked toward the lobby windows.

Rain tapped softly against the glass.

"I had you over for Thanksgiving."

Janice looked away.

The memory came back immediately.

Turkey in the oven.

Luke arguing politics.

Emily stealing rolls before dinner.

Janice sitting at the kitchen island asking for Sarah's stuffing recipe.

At some point during that evening, she'd probably already known.

Sarah wondered if she'd looked at her differently.

If pity had been sitting at the table alongside everyone else.

"You sat in my kitchen."

Janice's eyes filled.

Sarah hated that.

She didn't want Janice's guilt.

She wanted her ignorance back.

For several seconds neither woman spoke.

Then Sarah nodded once.

Not forgiveness.

Not anger.

Just acceptance.

The conversation was over.

Nothing useful remained inside it.

Across the street, she found herself sitting alone in a coffee shop.

Rain blurred the view of the bank.

The building looked distant now.

Smaller.

Sarah opened Facebook again.

Not to investigate.

She already knew enough.

Still, her thumb moved.

Photograph.

Comment.

Photograph.

Comment.

Then she saw a familiar name.

Linda Parker.

Linda had spent Thanksgiving at their house three years in a row.

Linda once called Sarah at ten o'clock at night asking for her lemon tart recipe.

Linda had written:

Beautiful couple ❤️

Sarah stared at the comment.

Then at the date.

Four months earlier.

Four months.

At that exact time, Sarah had been shopping for Robert's birthday gift.

Trying to decide between two golf clubs he wanted.

Meanwhile people were congratulating him and another woman.

Another comment appeared beneath it.

About time.

Sarah stopped scrolling.

That one hurt most.

About time.

Not shocking.

Not surprising.

Not unfortunate.

Expected.

The words suggested a story that had existed long before she found the first page.

Her phone rang.

Robert.

Sarah watched his name appear across the screen.

Then answered.

"Did everyone know?"

No greeting.

No introduction.

No warning.

Silence filled the line.

Then Robert exhaled.

"Sarah."

"Did everyone know?"

Another pause.

Long enough.

"Some people knew."

Sarah closed her eyes.

Some people.

The phrase sounded absurd now.

Some people had attended Christmas dinner.

Some people had watched her celebrate anniversaries.

Some people had hugged her and asked how Robert was doing.

Some people had apparently known more about her marriage than she did.

By the time she arrived home, the rain had stopped.

The house sat exactly where she'd left it.

Quiet.

Familiar.

Almost untouched.

The courier envelope waited beside the front door.

She nearly ignored it.

Until she saw Robert's attorney's letterhead.

The documents inside were neatly organized.

Prepared.

Professional.

Efficient.

Sarah turned pages slowly.

Asset division.

Property disclosures.

Consultation records.

Then she found the date.

Three weeks earlier.

She looked again.

Same date.

Three weeks.

Three weeks ago she and Robert had spent an entire Saturday helping Emily furnish her apartment. They'd argued about bookshelves. Shared french fries. Driven home together.

Three weeks ago she'd still believed they were planning a future.

Robert had already been planning an ending.

Sarah sat alone at the kitchen table while evening settled around the house.

The anniversary flowers still sat on the counter.

The petals had begun to droop.

She hadn't noticed before.

Now she couldn't stop looking at them.

Everything seemed clearer lately.

Especially the things that were already dying.

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