"The Wife He Took for Granted" Chapter 4
Sarah waited until Sunday to call the children.
Not Friday night.
Not after Robert walked out.
Not after the divorce papers arrived.
Sunday.
After two sleepless nights.
After too much coffee.
After discovering that grief could somehow make a house feel both crowded and empty at the same time.
Emily drove up from Charlotte first.
Luke arrived thirty minutes later.
Watching them walk through the front door nearly broke her.
Not from sadness.
From habit.
For twenty-six years, every time her children came home, it meant something good.
Thanksgiving.
Birthdays.
Summer cookouts.
Christmas mornings.
Parents spent decades believing they could protect their children from life's worst moments.
Then one day they became the reason those moments existed.
Emily found her in the kitchen.
One look was all it took.
"Mama."
Sarah hated that word immediately.
Not the word itself.
The concern inside it.
Emily crossed the room and wrapped her arms around her before Sarah could protest.
No questions.
No explanations.
Just a hug.
Sarah closed her eyes.
For a second she allowed herself to lean into it.
Just a second.
Then she pulled away.
"I'm okay."
Emily raised an eyebrow.
"Sure."
"Emily."
"Mom."
The exchange would have been funny under different circumstances.
Instead it felt heartbreakingly familiar.
Some dynamics never changed.
Not even when families did.
Luke entered carrying a six-pack of beer and a bag of takeout.
The same thing he'd brought every Sunday football season since college.
For a brief moment, Sarah watched him set everything on the counter and felt trapped inside a memory.
Her son looked older now.
Thirty-one.
Homeowner.
Accountant.
Adult.
Yet every mother carried two versions of her child simultaneously.
The grown man standing in front of her.
And the eight-year-old who once cried when his goldfish died.
"What's going on?"
Luke looked between them.
Neither woman answered immediately.
His smile faded.
"What happened?"
Sarah glanced toward the dining room table.
The words suddenly felt much heavier than they had during rehearsals.
No matter how many times she practiced, there was no gentle way to tell your children their family had shattered.
"Let's sit down."
The dining room had hosted hundreds of family meals.
Birthday dinners.
Graduation celebrations.
Holiday arguments.
Tonight it felt like a courtroom.
Nobody touched the food.
Nobody touched the beer.
Sarah folded her hands together and stared at the wood grain running across the table.
When she finally spoke, her voice sounded calmer than she expected.
"Your father moved out."
The room became very still.
Luke frowned.
"What?"
"He left."
Emily looked down immediately.
Not shocked.
Preparing.
The distinction mattered.
Sarah noticed.
Luke didn't.
"What do you mean he left?"
Sarah lifted her eyes.
"He was having an affair."
Silence.
Real silence.
The kind that changes a room permanently.
Luke stared.
Emily closed her eyes.
Neither spoke.
The grandfather clock ticked somewhere down the hallway.
A car passed outside.
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Life continued.
Inside the house, everything had stopped.
"No."
Luke's response came instantly.
Not anger.
Not denial directed at Sarah.
Pure disbelief.
"No."
Sarah watched the color leave his face.
"He wouldn't."
Emily rubbed her forehead.
Luke looked toward her.
Then back at Sarah.
Then back again.
As though one of them would eventually laugh and explain this was all a misunderstanding.
Nobody did.
"Mom..."
His voice cracked slightly.
"He wouldn't do that."
Sarah remembered saying almost the exact same words three days earlier.
The certainty sounded familiar.
Painfully familiar.
Luke wasn't defending Robert.
Not really.
He was defending the man he believed Robert had been.
The father who coached Little League.
The father who taught him how to drive.
The father who drove six hours through a snowstorm after Luke broke his leg sophomore year.
That version of Robert still existed inside his son's memories.
Sarah couldn't blame him for holding on.
She had done the same thing.
Emily finally spoke.
Quietly.
"I think he did."
Luke turned toward her.
"What does that mean?"
Emily hesitated.
For the first time since arriving, she looked genuinely uncomfortable.
Not surprised.
Not confused.
Uncomfortable.
Sarah felt a knot tighten in her stomach.
"Emily."
Her daughter looked down at the table.
Then at her hands.
Then finally at Sarah.
The guilt arrived before the words.
"Oh God."
Sarah's voice barely moved.
"What?"
Emily swallowed.
"I saw them."
The room seemed to tilt.
Nobody moved.
Nobody breathed.
Luke looked between them.
"What are you talking about?"
Emily's eyes filled immediately.
"I didn't know."
The words rushed out.
"Mom, I swear, I didn't know."
Sarah stared at her daughter.
The pain wasn't what Emily had seen.
The pain was suddenly realizing how long this had been happening.
"Where?"
"A restaurant."
Emily wiped beneath one eye.
"A few months ago."
Sarah closed her eyes briefly.
A few months.
Not weeks.
Months.
The timeline stretched longer again.
Every answer seemed to create three new questions.
"I thought it was business."
Emily's voice grew smaller.
"Then I saw them again."
Nobody spoke.
The silence felt unbearable.
Emily looked devastated.
Luke looked lost.
Sarah felt old.
Suddenly and completely old.
"What stopped you from telling her?"
Luke's question landed harder than anyone expected.
Emily looked at him.
Then at Sarah.
Then away.
The answer took several seconds.
"Dad."
One word.
Nothing more.
Nothing less.
The room fell silent again.
Sarah understood immediately.
Emily hadn't protected the affair.
She'd protected her father.
Protected the possibility she was wrong.
Protected the version of their family she wanted to believe still existed.
Children never stopped protecting their parents.
Even when they should.
Luke pushed back from the table.
The chair scraped sharply against the floor.
He stood and walked toward the window.
For several moments nobody spoke.
Rain clouds drifted beyond the glass.
The neighborhood looked exactly the same.
Sarah wondered if every disaster felt this private.
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The world remaining unchanged while yours collapsed.
"He really did this."
Luke wasn't asking anymore.
The sentence sounded different.
Heavier.
More final.
Nobody answered.
Nobody needed to.
Later, Emily helped clear the untouched dinner while Luke remained outside on the back deck.
The evening air had turned cold.
Sarah watched him through the kitchen window.
Hands in his pockets.
Head lowered.
Thinking.
Mourning.
Trying to reconcile two different versions of the same man.
She knew the feeling.
"He's taking it hard."
Emily stacked plates beside the sink.
Sarah nodded.
"So are you."
Emily laughed softly.
There wasn't much humor in it.
"I should've said something."
The guilt in her voice felt genuine.
Sarah placed a hand over hers.
"No."
Emily looked up.
"I mean it."
Sarah squeezed gently.
"You were his daughter."
Not his witness.
Not his judge.
Not his executioner.
His daughter.
Sometimes that alone was complicated enough.
The sun had disappeared completely by the time Luke finally came back inside.
He grabbed his keys from the counter.
His eyes were red.
Not crying.
Close.
Sarah didn't mention it.
Neither did he.
At the front door he hugged her unexpectedly.
Tightly.
Longer than usual.
When he finally stepped back, he looked almost embarrassed.
"I love you, Mom."
Sarah smiled.
"I know."
The words nearly broke her.
Luke nodded once.
Then walked outside.
She watched from the window as he climbed into his truck.
The engine started.
The headlights illuminated the driveway.
For a moment he simply sat there.
Not driving.
Not moving.
Just staring ahead.
Then he picked up his phone.
Sarah couldn't hear anything from inside the house.
Couldn't see his expression clearly.
But she knew.
Mothers always knew.
Luke was calling his father.
Not as a son seeking advice.
Not as a son sharing good news.
As a son looking for answers he wasn't sure existed.
The call connected.
Luke lifted the phone to his ear.
And for the first time in his life, Robert Mitchell would have to explain himself to someone who had once believed he could do no wrong.
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