LOGIN
“When she comes, we are getting a divorce, right away!”
Sarah froze.
The words sliced through the quiet hallway like a blade… sharp, merciless, unforgiving. For a second, she thought her mind was playing tricks on her. Maybe exhaustion had finally won. Maybe grief had begun to twist reality.
But no.
That voice… deep, familiar, once whispered against her skin in gentler days… belonged to her husband.
Frederick.
The basket of oranges trembled in her hands as she stood at the edge of the aisle, half-hidden behind a tall marble pillar that separated the hallway from the sitting room. Her heart pounded so loudly she was sure they could hear it.
Divorce?
She swallowed hard and leaned forward, her breath shallow.
“I was wrong before, Frederick,” another voice said… cool, firm, dripping with finality. “When she comes back, she must leave this house.”
That voice..
His mother.
Hannah.
Sarah’s knees nearly buckled.
So it was real. She hadn’t imagined it. Every word was deliberate. Planned. Discussed without her…like she was already a ghost.
“The marriage was a mistake from the beginning,” Hannah continued coldly. “For five years… five good years… and she has nothing to show for it. No child. Nothing.”
Sarah bit her lower lip until she tasted blood.
Five years.
Five years of devotion. Five years of waiting. Five years of shrinking herself to fit into a life that never truly wanted her.
Her mind drifted back… to where it all began.
She and Frederick had grown up together… childhood friends. Their mothers were inseparable, bound by laughter, secrets, and long afternoons spent planning futures that weren’t theirs to dictate. They had always wanted their children together, dreaming of becoming in-laws.
Frederick had always been close to her… protective, familiar, gentle. And somewhere between scraped knees and shared dreams, Sarah fell in love.
Deeply. Desperately.
She had always known that Frederick never wanted to marry her.
To him, she was a comfort. Familiarity. A friend.
Not love.
Then another voice joined the conversation.
Soft. Female.
Sarah stiffened.
She leaned forward….and saw her.
Margaret.
Frederick’s office secretary.
The woman he had truly loved. The woman he had wanted to marry. Sarah remembered the night he had confessed it, his eyes shining with a hope she had never inspired.
But Hannah had crushed it.
“No,” she had said then. “She’s not the one.”
Not because Margaret was unworthy…but because Hannah had already promised her son to Sarah, to Beatrice’s daughter.
“I always knew this day would come,” Margaret said lightly now. “Some people just refuse to accept when they’re not wanted.”
The basket slipped from Sarah’s hands.
The oranges scattered across the marble floor with a loud crash, rolling in every direction.
Silence slammed into the room.
Then they saw her.
“So,” Hannah said coolly, turning. “You were standing there all along?”
Sarah stepped forward slowly. Her face was pale, her eyes glassy…but proud.
For a moment, she couldn’t speak. The weight of everything she had just heard pressed painfully against her chest.
Then she forced the words out.
“I heard everything.”
Frederick turned to her, irritation flickering across his face…not guilt. Never guilt.
“That makes it easier,” he said flatly. “Then there’s no need to repeat it.”
Her breath hitched.
“No need to repeat?” she echoed. “After everything I’ve done for you?”
She laughed…a broken, hollow sound.
“I gave up my career for you, Frederick. I abandoned my dreams. I endured your silence. Your coldness. Five years…five years…you refused to touch me. And I still stayed.”
“And so?” Hannah snapped, rising to her feet.
She looked Sarah up and down with undisguised disdain.
“My son is done,” she declared. “It’s not by force to be loved. For five years, you have produced nothing. No child. Nothing.”
Sarah stiffened.
Hannah’s lips curled cruelly.
“A barren woman has no place in my son’s house.”
The word hit Sarah like a slap.
Barren.
Her ears rang. Her vision blurred.
She remembered the countless nights she cried herself to sleep, blaming her own body…while the truth was that her husband had refused to touch her for over three years. She remembered running to Hannah, kneeling before her, begging her to speak to her son.
Give him time, Hannah had said then
My son will love you. He will touch you. One day, he’ll be the one chasing after you.
And now…
Now she called her barren.
Sarah’s gaze shifted slowly… to Margaret.
The woman didn’t bother hiding her satisfaction. Her lips curved into a victorious smile, her eyes gleaming with mockery.
That look hurt more than all the words combined.
Sarah turned…and stopped short.
Her suitcases.
Neatly packed. Lined against the wall.
Prepared.
Her heart finally gave way.
Without another word, she walked into the bedroom. Her hands shook as she added the last of her belongings. Tears streamed freely now, soaking her blouse as she zipped the final bag.
She dragged the suitcase out, her shoulders straight despite the weight crushing her soul.
At the door, she paused.
“So this is it,” she said quietly, turning to Frederick. “After everything I did to earn your love.”
She wiped the tears from her cheeks.
“I hope one day you'll understand what you threw away.”
Frederick didn’t respond.
“Just go!” Hannah shouted.
Margaret laughed softly.
The door slammed shut behind her.
And just like that…
Sarah walked out of the house she once called home. Her sobs swallowed by the night, leaving behind the ashes of a love that never truly lived.
“God…” he murmured under his breath, his voice breaking slightly without his permission. “My dream… it’s happening…”The same nightmare.The same image that had haunted him just years ago.Sarah… choosing Gideon. Walking away from him.And now it was not just a dream. It was right in front of him.Gideon pulled back slowly, a faint smile resting on his lips as he looked at her.For a split second, there was something soft in his expression.Something that made Frederick’s chest tighten even more.Then, as he remembered there were other people in the room, Gideon finally shifted his gaze.His eyes landed on Frederick.There was no shock.No surprise.Just a calm, almost indifferent acknowledgment.“Oh,” he said lightly, as though he had just noticed him. “You’re here.”That was all. No greeting. No warmth.No trace of the years they had spent as friends.Nothing.Frederick felt the distance in those two words more than he would have felt an insult.Because this…This was worse than ang
“No…” Frederick whispered again, his voice hollow and strained as if the word itself was being dragged out of a place deep within him. “No… this can’t be real.”His hands trembled slightly at his sides, fingers curling and uncurling unconsciously as though trying to grasp onto something that was already slipping away from him.“She still knows me…” he muttered under his breath, his voice low and desperate. “She has to… she can’t just forget me like that…not Sarah… not the woman who…”He stopped himself, but it was too late.Because the fear had already taken hold.It crawled into his chest and wrapped tightly around his heart, squeezing, suffocating, making it hard for him to breathe.Because the way she had looked at him…There was nothing there.No anger. No sadness. No recognition.Just indifference.And that was far worse than hatred.Just as he was about to step forward, unable to stop himself any longer, desperate to call her name and force her to look at him again, a voice inte
Five years later….“Don’t tell me this is true…” Frederick’s voice came out strained, almost unrecognizable even to his own ears. His fingers pressed hard against the polished surface of the boardroom table as if holding onto it was the only thing keeping him from completely losing control. “We can’t be losing all our targets like this… not now… not after everything we’ve built.”The room was silent.Too silent.Not a single executive dared to speak. Heads were lowered. Eyes avoided him. The tension was suffocating, thick enough to choke on.Slowly…very slowly…Federick turned around.And his eyes landed on her.Margaret.She stood a few steps behind him, stiff, pale, her usual confidence completely shattered. Her lips trembled slightly, and her fingers clutched the edge of a file so tightly that her knuckles had turned white.For a moment, Frederick just stared at her.Then something in him snapped.“I put you in charge of this!” he thundered, his voice echoing harshly across the roo
“Good morning, Frederick… I’ve always loved you.”The voice was soft. Familiar. Wrapped in warmth.Frederick smiled in his sleep.In his dream, everything was bright…almost painfully so.He stood at the altar, dressed in a perfectly tailored tuxedo, the grand hall filled with white roses and murmuring guests. Sunlight poured through stained-glass windows, bathing the aisle in gold.And there she was.Sarah.She walked toward him in a flowing wedding gown, delicate lace hugging her figure, her veil trailing behind her like a promise. Her father stood proudly beside her, his hand resting protectively over hers as he escorted her down the aisle.Frederick’s chest swelled.He smiled at her—truly smiled—as if nothing bad had ever happened between them. As if love had never been complicated. As if regret had never existed.She smiled back.Step by step, she came closer.Almost there.Just a little more, and she would be standing beside him, before the pastor, ready to become his wife all ov
Last night after Frederick sent Sarah out from his house, he sank into the leather chair by the window.The house was quiet.Too quiet.Margaret and his mother, Hannah, had left hours ago…right after Sarah walked out with her suitcases. Margaret had followed Hannah to her house, happily offering to learn how to cook Frederick’s favorite dishes. She had laughed and said she was preparing herself to be a good daughter-in-law.Only Sarah knew the truth.Only Sarah knew how to cook those meals perfectly…because she had stood beside Hannah for years, watching, learning, memorizing every detail just to please him.Frederick stared around the living room.Empty.He felt relieved. Finally, the burden was gone. Finally, the marriage he never wanted was over. And thank God…the fight between his mother and Beatrice had happened. That was what finally made Hannah listen to him. For the first time, his voice had mattered.So why didn’t he feel happy?He stood up and walked into the bedroom.Their
A few hours later, Sarah stood in front of the house she once called home.The tall iron gates loomed before her like a final judgment, their cold metallic bars glinting under the afternoon sun. The sight alone sent a sharp ache through her chest. Her legs felt unbearably heavy, as though each step toward the gate pulled her further into memories she wasn’t ready to face. This house… once filled with her hopes, her silent sacrifices, and countless sleepless nights… now made her feel like a stranger standing at the threshold of a life that no longer belonged to her.She stared at the mansion beyond the gates. The garden she had personally designed still bloomed with vibrant roses and neatly trimmed hedges. The white marble fountain at the center still trickled gently, just as it had on the day she moved in as a new bride, filled with dreams she believed would last forever.But now, the sound of the flowing water felt like a cruel reminder that time had moved on without her.Taking a de







