The sterile white light of the Fairfield County oncology clinic flickered above Eleanor Harrington’s silver hair.
At seventy-two, after two brutal years of chemotherapy that left her retching into blue plastic basins, the doctor’s words felt like a resurrection.
‘No evidence of disease.’
She whispered a prayer and clutched the small gold cross her grandmother had given her on a wedding day forty years ago, when she’d been a blushing bride in lace and dreams.
For the first time in decades, she allowed herself a flicker of pure, untainted hope.
She drove the familiar route home, past the white-steepled church where she and Robert had exchanged vows, past the duck pond where their children once toddled in rubber boots.
The autumn leaves were a blaze of crimson and gold, a benediction of color after so many gray days of treatment.
She imagined telling Robert the news, maybe over a pot roast with those little pearl onions he used to love.
Perhaps this diagnosis had been the dark cloud, and now the sun could finally break through.
But as she turned into the circular driveway of the stately colonial mansion she’d called home for thirty-five years, a red convertible sat where her sensible Buick always parked.
Loud music thumped from inside, something raucous that rattled the leaded glass windows.
Her heart, still fragile from the chemo, began to race.
She walked through the front door, and the smell of cheap perfume hit her before the sight did.
Her mother’s Limoges vase lay shattered on the hardwood floor.
Champagne flutes, half-full, dotted the antique mahogany table she’d spent years polishing.
And there, on the chintz sofa she’d reupholstered with her own hands, sat Robert with his personal assistant, Melissa—a peroxide blonde young enough to be their granddaughter.
A gaudy diamond ring glittered on Melissa’s finger.
Robert’s arm was draped around her with the casual possession of a man who’d never once been denied.
‘Eleanor, you’re back early,’ Robert said flatly, not bothering to move.
‘Melissa and I were going to do this more formally, but since you’re here, congratulations are in order. I’ve asked her to marry me. She’s carrying my child.’
He squeezed Melissa’s shoulder as if she were a prize steer.
Eleanor’s throat closed.
‘Robert, I just came from Dr. Wells. The cancer—it’s gone. I’m in remission.’
Her voice was thin, a desperate thread reaching for some memory of the man she’d married.
Robert glanced at her with the mild irritation of a man whose football game had been interrupted.
‘Well, that’s convenient. You’ll be healthy enough to move out quickly. My lawyers prepared this.’
He tossed a thick envelope onto the coffee table.
‘Divorce papers. Vacate this house by Friday. The prenup you signed leaves you nothing—surely you recall. I’ll set up a modest trust to keep you in some apartment in Bridgeport.’
Melissa twirled the ring.
‘We’re redecorating, Mrs. Harrington. I’ve always wanted a walk-in closet for my Louboutins. Your garden will be so much cuter with pink flamingos instead of those tired hydrangeas.’