More documents.
- Bills in my name I didn’t recognize.
- Notes from teachers asking why I hadn’t replied.
- Printed emails I had never received.
I sat on the concrete floor, papers spread around me.
It wasn’t one big revelation—it was dozens of small ones.
All pointing to the same truth.
I had been excluded on purpose.
I found Peter in the kitchen when I went back inside.
I dropped the papers on the table.
“Why didn’t you tell me all along?” I asked.
He looked at them, then at me.
“I tried, but you weren’t ready to hear it,” he said. “If I had told you too soon, you might have pushed me away too. Every time I hinted at something, you defended him or blamed yourself. If I had said it directly back then, you would’ve shut me out—and been alone in it.”
That stopped me.
Because it wasn’t entirely wrong.
Still, something bothered me.
“You said you ‘knew.’ How?”
He hesitated, then answered.
“Sean’s former assistant, Kelly. She confided in me.”
That caught me off guard.
“When?”
“Before everything fell apart. She was worried about how things were being handled. I didn’t tell you then, but I’m telling you now because you’re finally ready to hear it.”
That night, I couldn’t sleep.
I kept thinking about what Peter said, about the boxes, about Kelly.
I needed to hear the truth myself.
So I made a decision—one I wasn’t proud of.
Peter was asleep when I quietly entered his room. We didn’t share a bedroom. There was no confusion about what our marriage was. His phone lay on the nightstand.
I hesitated.
Then I picked it up.
His password was simple: his name.
I found the contact.
Kelly.
I saved the number, then placed the phone back exactly as it was.
My hands were shaking as I left.
The next morning, I read the reply to my message: “Hi, this is Catherine. Sean’s ex. Could we talk?”
When I left the house, I told Peter I had errands to run.
He didn’t question it.
That somehow made it worse.
I drove to a small café across town.
When Kelly arrived, she looked younger than I remembered.
For a moment, we said nothing.
Then I spoke.
“I need to know what you told Peter.”
“He talked about you and the kids as if it were already decided,” she said without hesitation.
I frowned.
“He’d say it like it was only a matter of time—that you’d get overwhelmed and things would… shift. That the kids would end up with him full-time, and you’d just… disappear.”
I stared at her.
“He actually said that?”
She nodded. “More than once.”
“You’re sure?”
“I wouldn’t be here if I wasn’t. It’s one of the reasons I quit.”
I sat in my car for a long time afterward.
Not crying. Not angry.
Just clear—for the first time in years.
I had thought I was reacting to something sudden.
But it had been building all along.
And I had missed it.
That afternoon, I picked up the kids myself.
I spoke to Jonathan’s teacher, asked the questions I should have asked long ago.
I checked Lila’s schedule and confirmed things directly.
It felt strange at first—like stepping back into a role I had slowly been pushed out of.
But with every conversation, something settled.
I wasn’t guessing anymore.
I was showing up.
Over the following weeks, I kept going.
I organized every document, made calls, followed up on everything Sean used to handle.
Each step was small, but together they mattered.
Peter noticed, but said little.
Sean noticed too—and started calling more often.
“That’s not necessary, Cat,” he said once. “You’re overthinking. You’ve been spending too much time with my dad. He’s filling your head with nonsense.”
I didn’t argue.
I didn’t need to.
The biggest change came a week later.
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