
Chapter 1 of Wife's Divorce After Betrayal
The scent of garlic and rosemary filled our kitchen as I stirred the sauce, the wooden spoon clinking against the pot in a steady rhythm. Tonight was supposed to be a quiet dinner at home, just Messiah and me. I'd spent the afternoon planning the meal, hoping it might spark some conversation between us—anything to bridge the growing distance in our marriage.
The phone rang, shrill against the gentle simmer of the stove.
"Hello?" I answered, expecting a telemarketer or maybe Margaret, Messiah's mother, calling to check in.
Instead, a distorted voice crackled through the receiver. "Is this Haven Morris?"
My grip tightened on the phone. "Yes, who is this?"
"Listen carefully." The voice was mechanical, as if filtered through some kind of device. "Margaret and David Robinson have been taken. They're being held in an abandoned warehouse on the outskirts of the city."
My heart stuttered. "What? Who is this? Where are they?"
"They're strapped with explosives, Mrs. Morris. The device is set to detonate in six hours." The voice paused, letting the words sink in. "Only one person can defuse it—your husband, Messiah Robinson. The bomb disposal expert."
The wooden spoon slipped from my fingers, clattering against the tile floor. "I don't understand. Why would anyone—"
"The instructions are clear. Messiah Robinson must come alone. If police are involved, the bomb detonates immediately." The line went dead.
I stared at the phone, my hands trembling so violently I nearly dropped it. This had to be some kind of sick joke. But the clinical details about the bomb, the specific location... it felt real.
I fumbled to call Messiah, my thumb hovering over his contact. The call went straight to voicemail.
"Messiah, please answer!" My voice cracked with desperation. "Your parents are in danger! They've been kidnapped! There's a bomb!"
I ended the call and tried again. Voicemail.
"Messiah, please! This is serious! Your parents need you!"
By the fifth attempt, my messages were frantic, bordering on hysterical.
"Messiah, where are you? They said only you can defuse it! Please answer!"
Ten calls. Fifteen. Twenty.
Each time, the same automated response: "The person you're trying to reach is unavailable."
I paced our apartment, the phone clutched so tightly my knuckles turned white. The kitchen clock ticked relentlessly, each minute draining away precious time.
"Think, Haven, think," I whispered to myself. I called the police, my voice shaking as I explained the situation.
"We'll send officers to the location," Detective Sarah Chen assured me. "But Mrs. Morris, these calls are often hoaxes."
"It's not a hoax," I insisted. "They knew exactly who to call. They knew Messiah's expertise."
I hung up and tried Messiah's workplace next.
"Mr. Robinson took personal time today," his supervisor informed me. "Said he was going somewhere special."
"Special?" My stomach twisted. "Did he mention where?"
"No, ma'am. Just that he'd be back tomorrow."
I checked Messiah's location sharing on our phones—something we'd set up when we first married. It had been disabled that morning.
"He turned it off," I whispered, staring at the screen in disbelief.
Desperation clawing at my throat, I scrolled through his contacts and found Phoenix's number. Three calls, three voicemails.
"Phoenix, this is Haven. If you know where Messiah is, please call me back. It's an emergency. His parents are in danger."
The silence in our apartment pressed against my ears as I waited for any response—any sign that someone was listening, that someone cared.
I sent text after text:
"MESSIAH: YOUR PARENTS ARE GOING TO DIE IF YOU DON'T ANSWER!"
"PLEASE, MESSIAH! THEY NEED YOU!"
"WHERE ARE YOU?"
The clock on the wall showed three hours had passed since the initial call. Three hours of no response. Three hours of the bomb ticking down.
---
Two hours outside the city, on a secluded hilltop, Messiah lay on a blanket beside Phoenix. The night air was crisp, carrying the scent of pine and summer grass.
"Did you see that one?" Phoenix whispered, pointing at the streak of light across the velvet sky.
"Beautiful," Messiah murmured, his eyes reflecting the cosmic display.
His phone buzzed in his jacket pocket—once, twice, twenty times—but the vibrations were drowned out by Phoenix's laughter and the rustling of fabric as she snuggled closer.
"Take my picture," she urged, tilting her face toward the meteor shower. "I want to remember this moment forever."
Messiah obliged, snapping several photos of Phoenix bathed in starlight. Her smile was radiant, her eyes shimmering with tears of joy.
"You're the only one who understands me," she whispered, leaning into him. "The only one who sees the real me."
He took a photo of their intertwined hands, then one of their silhouettes against the cosmic backdrop.
"Some moments are worth everything," he said, posting the photos to social media with the caption: "With the one who truly understands me. #MeteorShower #SecondChances #Destiny."
Phoenix smiled, watching over his shoulder as he turned off his phone completely.
"I don't want anything interrupting this perfect moment," he explained, pulling her closer.
Neither of them noticed the bomb timer continuing its relentless countdown.
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