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The wife he left behind

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I gave him nine years.Nine years of stretching every coin, raising our son alone, sleeping on my side of the bed because I could not bring myself to take his. Nine years of telling Dave his father was working hard so they could have a better life.I believed it myself. Until I saw him on a public street with his hand on another woman’s waist, looking at her the way I spent nine years waiting for him to look at me.When he crossed the pavement it was not to apologise. It was to tell me she was his wife. Six months married. He told me to keep things calm, walked back to her, and introduced me as his cousin.The divorce papers came that same night.I needed a job immediately. For my son. For the bills that would not wait for me to finish falling apart. So I pulled myself together the way I always do and kept moving.I did not expect Mac Harlow.I did not expect him to run three blocks to return my dropped folder or offer me a job despite his sister’s calls to have me removed. I did not expect his daughter to find my son within ten minutes and decide they were already family.I did not expect to discover that the man I was starting to trust was connected to everything I was trying to leave behind.He did not know. I believe that.But Marshall knows now that someone else sees what he threw away. And he wants it back.He is nine years too late.Mac is looking at me like I am worth staying for. Not fixing. Not managing. Staying for.I spent nine years being someone’s afterthought.Never again.

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The cousin
"You should leave. He doesn't want you here." Cloe had heard a lot of things in her thirty-two years. She had heard a doctor say her son's name in a voice that made her stomach drop. She had heard Marshall's phone ring at 2am and watched him take it to the bathroom. She had heard every version of its going to be fine. But she had never heard it said to her face, clean and unbothered, by a woman she had never met before today. She kept her eyes on Marshall. He was standing ten feet away outside the restaurant, his hand resting at the small of another woman's back, and he was not looking at Cloe the way a man looks at someone he has wronged. He was looking at her the way a man looks at a problem that has walked into the wrong place at the wrong time. "Marshall." Her voice came out steadier than she felt. "Nine years. You owe me more than this." He crossed the pavement toward her. His jaw was tight, his steps measured. He stopped close enough that she could smell the cologne she had bought him for his birthday three years ago. She almost took a step back. She did not. "Keep your voice down," he said quietly. "I'm not raising my voice." "Cloe." He glanced back at the woman watching them. Then at her. "This is not how I planned to tell you. But since you're here." A pause. Controlled. Deliberate. "That's Sandra. We've been together for three years. We got married overseas six months ago." The city noise kept going around her. Somebody's music. A car horn. The world is entirely unmoved. Married. She had spent nine years alone in an apartment, stretching every coin, sitting in hospital waiting rooms with Dave's hand in hers, sleeping on her side of the bed because she could not bring herself to take his. She had told their son his father was working hard overseas so they could have a better life. She had believed it herself, or she had chosen to, which she understood now was the same as being a fool. "You have a son," she said. "Did that factor in at all?" "I'll handle Dave." "His name is not a line item, Marshall." Something crossed his face. Not guilt. Irritation. He was not sorry. He was inconvenienced. "Go home, Cloe." He turned and walked back to Sandra. She watched him reach her, watched his whole posture shift and soften, become the man she had spent nine years waiting for him to be for her. Sandra said something low. Marshall touched her face. "That was my cousin," he said, loud enough to carry. "Old family thing. It's nothing." Sandra laughed and let him guide her inside. Cloe stood on the pavement and breathed. Cousin. Nine years of her life, and she was his cousin. She turned before the tears could decide anything and walked fast, no direction, just away, until she rounded a corner and stopped and pressed both hands flat against the wall. She was not going to fall apart in public. She had made that rule a long time ago. She had never broken it. She pushed off the wall and kept walking. * * * She did not see him until she walked straight into him. The collision knocked her bag off her shoulder. Her phone hit the pavement. She stumbled and a hand caught her arm before she could go down. "Careful." She looked up. The man holding her arm was tall, dark-suited, watching her with an expression she could not read. Not annoyed. Not performing concern. Just present in a way that felt unfamiliar right now. He bent and picked up her phone. Screen cracked clean across the corner. "I'm sorry," Cloe said automatically. "You're apologising for walking into me." Not quite a question. "You were in the way." Something shifted in his face. Almost amusement. He held the phone out and she took it. Her hands were still unsteady. She hated that he could see it. "Are you alright?" he asked. The question was so simple and so direct that something in her chest pulled tight. No one had asked her that today. No one had asked her that in longer than she could remember. "Yes," she said. "Thank you." She walked away. She did not look back. She was three blocks away when she realised she had left her documents folder on the pavement. Her CV. Her references. Every carefully printed reason she was worth hiring. She stopped. "You dropped these." She turned. He was there, folder in hand, slightly out of breath. A man who clearly did not usually run after strangers and had done it anyway. She stared at him. He looked at the folder, then at her face, and his expression shifted. Careful now. Considering. "You're applying to Harlow Group," he said. Her stomach dropped. "Is that a problem?" A beat of silence. Then he held the folder out. "I'm Mac Harlow," he said. "Come in tomorrow. Eight o'clock. Don't be late." He walked away before she could say a single word. Cloe stood on the pavement holding her cracked phone and her folder and the ruins of the worst day of her life. Her phone buzzed. A number she did not recognise. She answered. "Ms. Vane." A woman's voice, crisp and professional. "This is Sandra Harlow. I believe you met my husband today. I'm calling to make sure we understand each other." Cloe went completely still. "The man you just spoke to," Sandra continued, smooth and unhurried, "is my brother. And I think it's best for everyone if you stay very far away from my family." The line went dead. Cloe looked at the phone in her hand. Then at the street where Mac Harlow had just walked away. Sandra's brother. The man who had just offered her a job was the brother of the woman her husband had secretly married. She stood there while that assembled itself in her mind, piece by piece, into something she had no name for yet. Then she put the phone in her bag, straightened her spine, and started walking. She had an interview at eight o'clock tomorrow morning. She was going to be there.

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