-Three Hours Earlier-
Michael Barron sat in his office overwhelmed by many unfinished projects. There were several prospective acquisition propositions to be assessed and approved. Another long evening awaited him at work. He refrained from complaining as he battled the urge to read the private investigator’s report on his wife. Michael couldn’t understand his fixation on something irrelevant. He battled several emotions after the investigator informed him, she either was having an affair with some foolish author or she planned to leave him. Regardless, she no longer visited the spa and was now renting an apartment. She had him paying for her love nest. That irked him to no end.
Michael knew he needed to call her and ensure she avoided him. He couldn’t face her right now. Michael felt he would harm her or do something completely in appropriate. He knew it was too late about the latter problem.
He’d called his personal lawyer and ordered him to deliver a set of separation and divorce papers to him in the morning. By then, he knew his temper would have gone from fiery hot to ice cold. He’d use the threat of a divorce to force his wife to end whatever this torrid affair was. She couldn’t afford to divorce him because she’d have nothing. He owned it all, and she now depended on him completely for her survival.
This was all a culmination of several plans and an error in allowing his anger to outweigh his logic. He’d planned his life years in advance so that everything he did now worked toward a future goal.
Michael decided he’d marry his longtime lover and sometime girlfriend. After all, she was lucrative, and her family connections would benefit him in the future. That fit his goal to be in his first marriage before he was thirty. The first marriage was a trial run to determine if married life suited him and his desired lifestyle. Michael didn’t plan to stay with whoever he married for longer than five years.
He’d set up a series of tests for Aria to encounter. From working with the woman, she hated in college to signing a prenup. Aria showed her true colours quickly and headed for the hills, just like Leon said she would. She bulked at signing the prenup, so Leon offered to sweep her off her feet and take her away. Aria took him up on that offer. The worst ten thousand he’d lost in recent years.
Michael knew Aria would come to her senses and come crawling back, eventually. But he made sure that the ship sailed by adding several unenforceable clauses into the event planning contract. Juliette was so easy to push to sign the document. He barely felt a pang as she signed her life away to him for five years.
He’d written into the contract it was her responsibility to get the bride to the wedding. Failing that, she would have to replace the bride with a suitable replacement of his choice before the ceremony began.
Moments before walking down the aisle, he had her sign the prenup. He knew it was all a selfish dick move, but he’d done it.
The true dick move was blaming her for Aria leaving. Though he’d not had a single problem with Aria until he’d introduced Juliette as the wedding planner. Many problems followed, and Michael didn’t care, really. A wedding and five years of marriage ensued. But Aria did everything possible to make Michael believe Juliette was unprofessional and didn’t know her business.
Aria and Leon had a relationship that was filled with ups and downs. That relationship spanned three years now. Michael married Juliette and his life quickly lost the high drama aspect with Aria out of it. He could forget about Juliette and know when he got home, she’d be fine.
Having a wife didn’t stop him from having fun with anyone. She was often absent or out of her comfort zone. So, he left her at home.
When he didn’t want to attend a function, he would send her alone to handle it. She handled it like a pro once he taught her a few simple rules.
Besides his affair, his life ran smoothly, and he saw no reason to make any changes. He desired things to remain unchanged.
After placing a call to Juliette and having a rather odd but brief conversation with her. Michael contemplated whether he should go for dinner first or continue working.
With files and reports spread out over the glass top of his desk, he was deep in thought. He toyed with the tie he’d just removed when his heavy office door opened. Someone invaded his private space. Invaded by a bleach blonde with too much floral perfume and enough hair spray to hold a flag in place during a category five hurricane.
Aria Caine entered his office with a large takeout bag from a restaurant she knew he liked. Clad in a broad smile and a skirt that would give a wide belt a challenge over which one covered more flesh. Between the sky-high heels in bubble gum pink, and a matching purse, she’d found jewellery to match it. Lately, the woman resembled a lifelike cartoon character. She’d once been a classic beauty until she stopped using a stylist and made her own style decisions, believing she was a style influencer of some sort.
Currently, she and Leon were on the outs again and Michael knew this because Leon called him to warn him.
Every time she broke up with Leon, she came crawling back to Michael. Despite her cartoonish appearance, she still possessed beauty and a nice physique. Her daddy paid enough for it. Michael had no intentions of a long-term commitment with Aria, yet she seemed oblivious to her past actions and expected an engagement.
He was married, and she expected him to ask her to marry him. The hair spray seemed to have affected his memory, as he didn’t recall her being this simple.
“Hey Micky! I brought you something to eat. A big, powerful man like you can’t go hungry.” She knew Michael hated the name Micky, or any other nickname. But when she said it in that mock baby voice, it was cringe worthy for him. She’d barely entered his office, and he already felt annoyed with her.
Like most women, she serves some purpose in his life. She was only a source of sexual pleasure, with no other worth. When they broke up, Leon didn’t care about her actions or the people she associated with. Michael knew Leon wouldn’t perceive it as a betrayal. He knew how much Aria catted around on him between dating sprees.
“What do you want Aria? I’m working.” Did he want her to take care of some personal business for him?
Julie removed her earbuds as she sat at her desk. She’d just listened to the ready-to-print version of her fifteenth novel. It was survivable, at least. She felt Stephen and her publisher would love it. She could hear everyone out at the pool having fun. Michael entertained the early bird parents and kids as they slowly arrived for Johnathan’s birthday pool party. Their children’s parties seemed to be an event where people wanted invitations and their presence recognized by their peers. Julie couldn’t believe the changes that had happened over the last few years. Johnathan’s birth shone in her brain as the mark when Julie knew Michael was hers. He’d not settled, but he’d found a different direction for his life that made him happier. Michael had help from the parents, nannies, and several staff members minding the chaos of children everywhere. They’d long ago child proofed the house, and currently Michael hid his genuine prized items in a series of locked rooms away from t
Aria’s honeymoon was so much more than she had expected, and she used her social media accounts to poke the bear that was her father. She posted teasing photos of the place where she got married. Sold a few of her wedding photos to a couple of magazines with an interview hinting at why her father really wasn’t at her wedding and how disappointed she was at his betrayal of family ties. At the end of the interview, Aria made it good and clear that she’d broken off all ties with her father and she wasn’t interested in ever reconciling at any time in the future. He and his staff burned those bridges. As she went around Europe and saw the unique way of life there, some of it initially felt confusing and complicated. But she investigated other differences in how they treated people. It was something she’d not given much thought about until her life spiralled out of control and she finally understood why she was the way she’d become. It wasn’t pretty, and she had the photos and v
“Edward has everything in the car, Julie. We’re ready to head for the hospital. Now, you’re sure you’re okay with going through with a c-section? I mean, if you change your mind, you can still back out.” Michael could see how large Julie grew and wondered how his son hadn’t torn his way out. Michael worried Julie could no longer stand and walk safely. Life kept changing and he couldn’t believe he’d once thought this part of his life could go on without him. Over the last eight and a half months, he’d learned so much about a woman’s body he had to wonder if they were the same species. Women were so complicated, and Julie had some unique complications. A common comorbidity Julie had called EDS would complicate even the epidural she would need. Her joints had more range, and it caused her shoulders, back, and hips to be uneven. It could complicate administering the epidural. If she couldn’t get it, then she’d have to give birth naturally without it. This terrified Julie, alon
“I’m glad you’re doing this, Julie. Honestly, I don’t know what her father is thinking. But if he thinks she could embarrass him normally, to not come to his daughter’s wedding. Campaigning or not, he’s going to look bad. He recognized her as his daughter when it was convenient for him. Now he pulls this because it’s not convenient. His poll numbers will go down and he’ll lose the public confidence. If it gets out and it will that we showed up after that entire mess that started all of this. He’s sunk.” “You don’t think this is a mistake? She will not pull something fast. Like become caught in someone else’s bed?” “Julie, Aria’s been through a lot in the last six months. Leon didn’t just send her to rehab to just get off the medication. He sent her to a location that deals with complex abuse cases. She doesn’t realize it, but they did. He had to wait for over two years to get her a place there. It’s why I took her in like I did. I admit there were other stupid
The small plane landed at the secluded island airport, and Julie sighed in relief. There was something about travelling she disliked. To come all this way for a wedding for someone she didn’t like seemed crazy. But Leon was Michael’s best friend and Julie would muddle through it for five days there. What she still couldn’t get over was Aria’s request to come and bury the hatchet somewhere other than Julie’s back. She’d apologized. The hadron collider must have tested something again, and the world altered in reaction to the outcome of that test. That’s how Julie thought of why things changed in ways she didn’t see coming. Not that she believed the conspiracies; it was just a humorous way to look at her problem because Julie didn’t believe she’d ever find out the true reason these things changed. But jumping off into another timeline felt as sane as any other reason, and perhaps sometimes more logical. They stepped off the plane with the other guests, and a protracted line
Michael had said that he didn’t want to celebrate something that didn’t change. He didn’t want to admit he’d changed, and that changed their relationship. His explanation for this was he’d not been aware that he could be any other way until he’d seen how she lived in perpetual difference. Her effort to give him an easier existence while ignoring her own struggles had him questioning and rejecting much of his father’s teachings. It’d crossed over into his work life to and several people mentioned it over the months. So much so it became part of the water cooler gossip. Julie only found out about this after they’d gone back to the gym, and she heard the gossip at the juice bar. Michael hadn’t gone with her today as he now often did. Julie still struggled to become used to his constant presence around her. But she knew why this time around she struggled with it. Julie had to fight putting up a mask for the world and in that moment with Michael at the gym, she couldn’t figure