The marble lobby was bustling with assistants and couriers when I walked in, both hands gripping the handles of those two heavy bags. The young
I could feel eyes on me from every corner. I didn’t care.
I stopped directly in front of her. She stammered something I didn’t hear, her cheeks flushing crimson. I looked her dead in the eye and kept my voice perfectly calm. “Congratulations…
The words dropped like a stone. Conversations stalled. The receptionist’s fingers froze above the keyboard. I felt a courtroom’s worth of silence press against my skin.
Then, right on cue, the elevator doors opened with a soft chime.
Adrian stepped out. His face, usually so composed, drained of color in an instant. He took one step forward, then stopped, as if the sight of those suitcases was a physical blow. For a fleeting second, I wanted him to fall to his knees. I wanted him to beg. I wanted him to know the exact weight of
But before I could say another word, Tessa did something I hadn’t anticipated.
She didn’t smile. She didn’t flinch. Instead, she reached into a drawer beneath her desk, pulled out a thick manila envelope, and pressed it into my trembling hands. Her voice was barely a whisper, cracking at the edges. “Please, before you go… you have to read this. It’s not what you think.”
I stared at her. There were tears forming in her eyes—real tears, not the kind you summon to get out of a parking ticket. Confusion swirled through my
I didn’t look at him. I didn’t ask questions. I just turned on my heel, the envelope clamped against my chest, and walked out of that lobby. The automatic doors slid shut behind me, and the world felt like it was holding its breath.
In the parking lot, the heat wrapped around me like a blanket, but I was shivering. I climbed into my car, locked the doors, and sat there for what felt like an eternity, staring at that envelope. My name—Eleanor Rose Beckett—was handwritten across the front in Adrian’s careful script. I knew that handwriting. It was the same hand that had written love notes on our bathroom mirror, birthday cards tucked under my pillow, and the vows he spoke to me with tears streaming down his face.
Slowly, I tore the seal.
Inside was a letter, six pages long, written on his personal stationery. Alongside it, an official medical report from a well-known cancer center in Scottsdale. The letterhead alone made my stomach drop.
I began to read.
“My dearest Eleanor,
If you are reading this, then my plan has worked—and I am deeply, profoundly sorry for the pain I have caused you. Please know that not a single word or action of the past few months was born from a lack of love. It was born from a love so desperate and all-consuming that I could see no other way.
Six months ago, I was diagnosed with glioblastoma. Grade four. The doctor gave me nine to twelve months, though some days I feel the time slipping faster than I can count. Surgery was too risky; treatments might have given me a few extra weeks, but they would have stolen the last shred of who I am. I couldn’t bear the thought of you watching me slip away—first my strength, then my clarity, then my memories of you. I couldn’t make you sit helpless while I became a shadow of the man you married.
So I did something unforgivable. I hired a young woman—Tessa Lane—and I asked her to pretend to be involved with me. I staged everything: the late nights, the perfume on my shirt, the text messages, that voice recording you must have heard. I planted it all so you would find it. I wanted you to be angry. I wanted you to hate me. Because I foolishly believed that anger is easier to carry than grief.
Tessa is not my mistress. She is a nursing student who works evenings at a memory care facility. She took this job to help pay for her mother’s medical bills. She is a sweet, innocent soul who agreed to a desperate old man’s scheme because she couldn’t bear to see someone else lose their loved one the way she lost her father. I will be grateful to her forever.