Current location: Novel nest The Wife He Took for Granted Chapter 3

"The Wife He Took for Granted" Chapter 3

The lawyer's envelope sat on the kitchen table all afternoon.

Sarah moved it twice.

First to the counter.

Then beside the refrigerator.

By six o'clock, it had somehow found its way back to the center of the table, where it waited beside the anniversary flowers she'd bought three days earlier.

The flowers were beginning to droop.

She noticed that now.

The petals had started curling inward, as though they already knew what the rest of the house was still trying to deny.

Outside, headlights swept across the front window.

Sarah looked up.

For one brief second, her body reacted before her mind could.

Relief.

Automatic. Familiar.

Twenty-six years of marriage had trained her to recognize the sound of Robert's car before it reached the driveway.

Then reality caught up.

The relief disappeared.

The front door opened.

Robert stepped inside carrying his briefcase.

Not a suitcase.

Not guilt.

A briefcase.

Like he'd come home from any ordinary Tuesday.

For a moment, Sarah simply stared at him.

The normalcy felt almost offensive.

Robert loosened his tie and set his keys on the entry table.

The small metallic sound echoed through the foyer.

"Sarah."

That was all he said.

Not

I'm sorry.

Not

Can we talk?

Not even

How are you holding up?

Just her name.

Sarah let out a short laugh.

Robert frowned.

"What?"

She looked away.

Nothing about this felt real.

Yesterday morning she'd been planning an anniversary dinner.

Tonight she was standing in a kitchen with divorce papers on the table and another woman's name lodged permanently inside her marriage.

"You know," she said quietly, "I spent most of today wondering how this conversation would start."

Robert said nothing.

"I have to admit, I didn't expect it to be your version of hello."

His expression tightened.

Not from shame.

From discomfort.

As though they were discussing something unpleasant but unavoidable.

Sarah hated that expression.

Bank executives wore it when discussing layoffs.

Lawyers wore it when discussing settlements.

Nobody should wear it while ending a marriage.

They sat at opposite ends of the kitchen table.

The distance between them wasn't large.

Six feet, maybe.

Yet Sarah had never felt further away from anyone in her life.

The grandfather clock ticked softly from the hallway.

A car passed outside.

Somewhere down the street a dog barked.

Ordinary sounds.

Ordinary life.

The world had apparently decided not to stop spinning for personal catastrophes.

Robert folded his hands together.

The gesture looked rehearsed.

"I never wanted you to find out like this."

Sarah stared at him.

The sentence landed strangely.

Not wrong.

Just irrelevant.

Like discussing weather during a house fire.

"Find out what?"

His jaw shifted.

"Sarah."

"No."

She shook her head.

"Let's not do that."

"Do what?"

"Speak in code."

She leaned forward slightly.

"The affair."

The word sat between them.

Neither looked away.

"The photographs."

Another pause.

"The lawyer."

ADVERTISEMENT

Silence.

"The woman you've apparently been introducing to people while I was still buying anniversary gifts."

Robert rubbed a hand across his forehead.

The same gesture he'd used for years whenever meetings ran too long.

Sarah remembered watching him do it at Luke's high school graduation.

At Emily's college orientation.

At Christmas dinner when politics came up.

Back then the gesture had felt familiar.

Now it felt like distance wearing a familiar face.

"I met someone."

The sentence finally arrived.

Simple.

Clean.

Prepared.

Sarah wasn't surprised.

The wording was almost exactly what she'd expected.

Not

I betrayed you.

Not

I lied.

Not

I destroyed our marriage.

Just:

I met someone.

As though Madison had wandered into his shopping cart at the grocery store.

As though this entire disaster had happened by accident.

"When?"

The question escaped before she could stop it.

Robert looked down briefly.

That was answer enough.

Long enough.

Long enough to require lies.

Long enough to require secrets.

Long enough for coworkers to know.

Long enough for lawyers to get involved.

Long enough for strangers on Facebook to congratulate them.

Sarah nodded slowly.

The timeline no longer mattered.

The existence of a timeline was enough.

"It wasn't planned."

Robert's voice remained calm.

Measured.

Professional.

The voice he used with clients.

"I wasn't looking for this."

Sarah almost smiled.

Not from amusement.

From exhaustion.

The phrase sounded familiar.

Every affair seemed to come packaged with the same explanations.

Nobody planned it.

Nobody looked for it.

Nobody meant for anyone to get hurt.

And somehow people still got hurt every day.

"You know what's funny?"

Robert frowned.

Sarah glanced toward the living room.

From where she sat, she could see part of the bookshelf.

Emily's second-grade class picture still sat there.

The frame had a crack in one corner.

She'd always meant to replace it.

Never did.

"Twenty-six years."

Her voice softened.

Not emotionally.

Thoughtfully.

"Twenty-six years and I honestly believed if something was wrong, you'd tell me."

Robert looked away.

That hurt more than any answer could have.

"I haven't been happy for a long time."

The words hung in the air.

For a second, Sarah wondered whether she had heard him correctly.

Not happy.

The phrase drifted through memory after memory.

Christmas mornings.

Family vacations.

The night Luke broke his arm.

The afternoon Emily graduated nursing school.

The summer they painted the deck together.

Not happy.

Sarah looked at the man sitting across from her and felt something shift.

Not anger.

Not sadness.

Something closer to disbelief.

The memories remained exactly where she'd left them.

Only now Robert seemed determined to reinterpret them.

"You really believe that?"

His expression hardened slightly.

"What?"

"That you've been unhappy all these years."

Robert exhaled slowly.

"I think I've been pretending for a long time."

The sentence landed harder than the affair.

Pretending.

Sarah looked around the kitchen.

ADVERTISEMENT

The kitchen she'd refinished herself one summer while Robert traveled for work.

The kitchen where she'd packed school lunches and birthday cupcakes and Christmas cookies.

Pretending.

Apparently she'd been the only person living there.

"You remember the lake cabin?"

The question caught Robert off guard.

"What?"

"My grandmother's cabin."

Sarah watched recognition appear in his eyes.

Of course he remembered.

The cabin had paid off nearly half their debt after the recession.

She'd loved that place.

Everyone knew it.

"You told me selling it would help us build a future."

Robert remained silent.

Sarah continued.

"I agreed."

The memory returned vividly.

The lake.

The dock.

The smell of pine trees.

Her grandmother's rocking chair.

Gone.

All of it.

Sold.

Not for Robert.

Not for Sarah.

For them.

At least that's what she'd believed.

"I didn't hesitate."

Her voice remained calm.

That seemed to bother Robert more than shouting would have.

"I never asked whether it made me happy."

Silence.

"I asked whether it helped us."

The distinction settled heavily between them.

Robert leaned back in his chair.

For the first time all evening, frustration appeared.

Not guilt.

Not remorse.

Frustration.

"I deserve a chance to be happy too."

There it was.

The real conversation.

Not Madison.

Not the affair.

Not the lies.

Happiness.

The word sat at the center of everything.

Sarah stared at him.

Suddenly she understood why the conversation felt so strange.

They weren't discussing the same marriage.

Robert was talking about personal fulfillment.

Sarah was talking about commitment.

He was measuring happiness.

She was measuring loyalty.

No wonder they couldn't find common ground.

They were standing on different planets.

The silence stretched.

Eventually Sarah stood.

The chair slid backward across the hardwood floor.

Robert looked up.

Something uncertain flickered across his face.

For the first time all evening, he seemed unsure what would happen next.

Sarah pointed toward the staircase.

"You should pack."

"Sarah—"

"No."

The word came easily.

Too easily.

Perhaps she'd been saying it internally for years.

"I've spent two days trying to understand this."

She looked directly at him.

"I don't think understanding changes anything."

Robert opened his mouth.

Closed it.

Then looked away.

Again.

Always away.

Never at her.

Half an hour later, he came downstairs carrying a suitcase.

One suitcase.

Twenty-six years reduced to wheels and a handle.

The sight should have broken her.

Instead it felt strangely ordinary.

Perhaps the marriage had ended long before the suitcase appeared.

Perhaps this was simply the first visible evidence.

Robert stopped near the door.

The uncertainty remained.

Small.

Persistent.

Human.

For a brief moment Sarah caught a glimpse of the man she'd married beneath everything else.

The man from the wedding photographs.

The young husband who once drove across town with milkshakes.

The father who taught Luke how to ride a bike.

The man who had once loved her.

That was the tragedy.

Not that he had never existed.

That he had.

"I never meant to hurt you."

Sarah looked at him quietly.

Then at the suitcase.

Then back again.

When she finally spoke, her voice was steady.

"I think that's the problem."

Robert frowned.

"What does that mean?"

"It means hurting me wasn't important enough to stop you."

Neither moved.

Neither spoke.

A second later, Robert lowered his eyes.

Then he opened the door and walked out.

The sound of the door closing echoed through the house.

Sarah remained where she was.

The silence that followed felt enormous.

Not empty.

Different.

Like a room after furniture had been removed, revealing space nobody realized was there.

On the kitchen table, the divorce papers remained untouched.

Beside them sat the dying anniversary flowers.

Sarah looked at both for a long moment.

Then she looked toward the dark window above the sink.

For the first time since seeing Madison's photograph, she stopped asking why Robert had left.

A different question had begun taking shape.

If the life she'd built around him was gone, what exactly remained underneath it?

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Compartilhar Link

Copie o link abaixo para compartilhar com seus amigos: