Wife Chooses Divorce After Husband's Betrayal

The kite fluttered in Emma's small hands, her fingers tracing the blue and green patterns she'd painted herself. She'd spent three days perfecting it, adding glitter to the tails and a special message only she and Marcus would understand.

"Will Daddy be here soon?" Emma asked, her eyes fixed on the window overlooking the park where other fathers were already running with their children, colorful kites dancing against the spring sky.

I checked my watch again. "He said he'd be home by two, sweetheart. It's just..." I glanced at the clock—3:45 PM. "He might be running a little late."

My phone buzzed with Marcus's text: *Can't make it. Grace needs help moving furniture into new apartment. Fourth time this month. Sorry.*

The words blurred as I stared at the screen. Fourth time in two months. Each time with the same excuse: Grace needed him.

"Emma," I said carefully, kneeling beside her chair by the window. "Daddy had to help Ms. Porter with some things at her new place. We'll fly your kite another time."

Emma didn't cry. That was the worst part—she didn't even look surprised anymore. She just nodded, her small fingers tightening around the kite strings.

"Okay, Mommy," she whispered, settling deeper into the window seat, still watching the other families in the park.

I made her lunch, read her stories, and tucked her into bed that night. When Marcus finally came home after ten, he found Emma curled on our couch, asleep with the kite clutched to her chest, strings tangled around her fingers.

"What happened?" he asked, loosening his tie as he looked at our daughter.

"You happened," I said, my voice low but steady. "You happened four times in two months."

Marcus sighed, running a hand through his hair. "Caroline, you know why I had to go. Grace wouldn't ask if she wasn't desperate. She has no one else since Robert died."

"And we have you," I countered, gesturing to Emma's sleeping form. "Or at least, we thought we did."

He dismissed me with a wave. "You don't understand the obligation I have to her. Robert was my mentor, my closest friend. He asked me to look after them before he died."

"And who asked you to be a father?" The words slipped out before I could stop them.

---

The next morning, Emma and I made Marcus's favorite chocolate chip cookies. She insisted, despite everything.

"Daddy will be happy if we bring him cookies," she said, carefully pressing chocolate chips into the dough.

I drove to Reed Corporation, Emma clutching the cookie tin in her lap. The receptionist recognized me and waved us up to Marcus's office.

I knocked lightly before pushing the door open, a smile ready on my face.

It froze there.

Grace Porter stood beside Marcus's desk, her hip pressed against the edge, leaning close as she pointed to something on his computer screen. Her hand rested casually on his shoulder, fingers splayed across the fabric of his suit jacket.

"Oh, look at this one!" she laughed, her voice warm and intimate. "Sophia got an A on her science project. I told her you'd be proud."

Marcus smiled—that rare, genuine smile I hadn't seen directed at Emma in months. "She's a smart girl, Grace. Robert would be so proud."

I cleared my throat.

Grace spun around, her hand dropping from Marcus's shoulder. For a split second, I caught something in her eyes—calculation, not embarrassment.

"Caroline!" she exclaimed, smoothing her skirt. "What a lovely surprise. I was just showing Marcus Sophia's school photos."

Marcus straightened, his expression shifting to something more guarded. "Grace needed help organizing some files for the foundation."

"Of course she did," I replied, my voice steady despite the knot in my stomach.

Grace stepped back, her eyes darting between us. "I should go. I've taken up so much of Marcus's precious time already."

---

The school gymnasium buzzed with activity for the parent-child art day. Emma had worked on her clay sculpture for weeks—a family of three holding hands, painted in bright colors.

"Where's Daddy?" she whispered, scanning the room as other families displayed their projects.

"He'll be here," I promised, though I wasn't sure anymore.

Thirty minutes late, Marcus pushed through the doors, Sophia trailing behind him.

"I'm sorry," he said to the teacher, not to us. "We had a meeting that ran over."

The teacher smiled politely. "No problem, Mr. Reed. You're just in time for the presentations."

Emma clutched her sculpture tightly as we moved to our table. Across from us, Sophia unwrapped her hastily made project—a lopsided bowl with uneven glaze.

"Look what I made, Uncle Marcus!" she called loudly.

Marcus crouched beside her, examining the bowl with genuine interest. "This is fantastic, Sophia! Is this for me?"

Emma shifted beside me, her small body tense with hope.

"Emma made something too," I prompted.

Marcus glanced up briefly. "Nice job, sweetheart."

That's all. No questions about her weeks of work, no admiration for the careful details she'd added.

When Emma reached to adjust her sculpture, her elbow knocked against it. The clay family toppled forward, cracking as it hit the table.

A small gasp escaped her lips as the figures broke apart.

Emma looked up at Marcus, her eyes filling with tears she refused to let fall.

"Why don't you like me anymore, Daddy?" she asked, her voice clear and cutting in the suddenly quiet gymnasium. "Did I do something wrong?"

Marcus froze, his mouth opening but no words coming out.

Other parents turned to stare, and in that moment, I knew nothing would ever be the same again.

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