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The Unseen Husband
The Unseen Husband
Author: Lizzie/Raquel E Posada

Episode 1: The Divorce Papers

last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-02-03 12:32:43

 

 


PRESENT DAY - THE VILLAGE POST OFFICE

The bell above the door chimed as Alessia Russo stepped into the cramped post office, her three children trailing behind her like ducklings. Dante held Marco's hand, while Lucia clutched the hem of her mother's worn dress.

"Mrs. Russo!" The postmaster, Signor Benedetti, looked up with surprise. "I wasn't expecting to see you here. I usually send post up to the house."

"I know." Alessia forced a smile. "I thought I'd save you the trip. The children wanted to see the market."

It was a lie, but a necessary one. She'd overheard Helena talking to Tomasso three days ago: "Important papers are coming for Sebastian. Make sure you intercept them before that girl sees anything."

Alessia had woken before dawn, dressed the children quietly, and slipped out of the house before anyone else stirred.

"Ah, well then." Benedetti shuffled through the sorted mail behind his counter. "Let me see... yes, here we are. A letter from the capital. Official looking." He handed her a thick envelope, sealed with red wax bearing the Royal Guard insignia.

Alessia's hands trembled as she took it. "Thank you, Signor Benedetti."

"Everything alright, Mrs. Russo? You look pale."

"I'm fine. Just... tired." She ushered the children toward the door. "Come along."

Outside, she found a quiet corner near the fountain, away from prying eyes. The children sat on the stone edge, swinging their legs, while Alessia stared at the envelope.

Five years. Five years since Sebastian had left. Five years of silence, of wondering, of hoping.

And now this.

Her fingers shook as she broke the seal.


THE LETTER

To my wife,

I hope this letter finds you well. I apologize for the formality of this communication and for my long absence. It has been five years since our wedding night, and I've come to realize that what we're doing—this waiting, this half-life—is unfair to you.

My work keeps me in the capital and will continue to do so for at least another two or three years, possibly longer. You deserve better than waiting indefinitely for a man who may never return, who cannot be the husband you need.

I want to set you free. You can remarry if you wish, or simply live your life as you see fit. Given that there are no children between us and you seem to have formed an attachment to someone else (my mother mentioned in her last letter that a local merchant has been calling on you frequently), I believe this is the right course.

I will provide a substantial settlement to ensure your financial security. The papers are enclosed. You need only sign them.

I wish you every happiness.

Sebastian


Alessia read the letter three times, each word cutting deeper than the last.

No children between us.

She looked at Dante, Marco, and Lucia—four years old, dark curls catching the morning sun, their father's serious expression on Dante's face, their father's nose on all three of them.

No children.

"Mama?" Lucia tugged on her sleeve. "Why are you crying?"

Alessia hadn't realized tears were streaming down her face. She wiped them away quickly. "I'm fine, little bird. Just... dust in my eyes."

You seem to have formed an attachment to someone else.

The merchant. Signor Alberti, who delivered fabric for her sewing work. They'd exchanged perhaps a dozen words total, all of them transactional. "Three meters of cotton, please." "That will be two silver."

Helena had told Sebastian she had a lover.

Helena had told Sebastian there were no children.

Five years of letters, Alessia thought, her mind racing. I wrote to him every month for the first two years. Then every few months when I got no response. I told him about the pregnancy. About the birth. About the children's first words, first steps. About Marco's illness. About everything.

And Sebastian's letter said he didn't know about any of it.

Which meant...

Alessia's blood ran cold.

The letters. All those letters she'd carefully written and given to Helena to post. Helena had always said, "Of course, I'll see it's sent." Always with that cold, dismissive tone.

Had any of them been sent?

Or had Helena been lying for five years?

And Sebastian's letters to me, Alessia realized with growing horror. The ones Helena claimed never came. What if they DID come? What if he's been writing to me all along, asking about me, sending money, and I never knew because Helena kept them from me?

It would explain everything. Why Sebastian thought she'd moved on. Why he thought there were no children. Why he was offering divorce—he believed she wanted it.

Alessia's hands tightened on the divorce papers.

He didn't know.

Sebastian didn't know he had children. He thought she'd been unfaithful. He thought she'd moved on.

Everything he believed was a lie.

Helena, Alessia thought with sudden, burning clarity. Helena did this. She kept us apart. She stole our letters, our connection, our chance to actually be married.

But why?


FLASHBACK - FIVE YEARS AGO - THE WEDDING NIGHT

The memory came unbidden, as it often did in quiet moments.

Alessia had been eighteen, dressed in her mother's carefully preserved wedding dress—the only thing of value she'd owned. The village elders had arranged the marriage quickly, eager to be rid of the "traitor's daughter."

"The Russo family is respectable," Elder Tommasi had said. "You're lucky they'll have you, given your father's disgrace."

She'd been collected from her small cottage at dusk, her face covered by layers of ceremonial veils. Two village women had led her through unfamiliar streets to a house larger than any she'd ever entered. The Russo family home.

A woman's cold hand had gripped her elbow—her future mother-in-law, though she hadn't known it then.

"This way. Don't dawdle."

The ceremony had been brief, conducted by candlelight in a room that smelled of incense and old wood. She'd glimpsed her groom through the thick fabric covering her face—just an impression of height, broad shoulders, dark hair. A man's voice speaking vows, deep and steady.

She'd whispered her own vows in return, her heart pounding.

Then she'd been led to a bedchamber and told to wait.

The room had been lit by only a few candles, their flames casting more shadows than light. Tradition demanded that neither bride nor groom see each other clearly until after the marriage was consummated. Something about fate, about ensuring the union was blessed rather than swayed by shallow attraction.

Alessia had waited for what felt like hours, her nervousness building with each passing minute.

Finally, the door had opened.

Her husband had entered, still just a shadow in the dim light. Tall, she'd noticed. Broad-shouldered. Moving with a kind of controlled grace that suggested either military training or aristocratic breeding.

"You don't need to be afraid," he'd said, his voice gentler than she'd expected. "We can take this slowly."

They'd talked, briefly. Awkward conversation between strangers about to become intimate. He'd asked if she was comfortable, if she wanted more wine, if she needed anything.

His consideration had surprised her. Touched her.

When they'd finally come together, he'd been patient. Kind. His hands had been calloused but gentle, his body warm against hers in the cool room. She'd touched his face in the darkness—strong jaw, high cheekbones—and thought, He must be handsome.

It had hurt at first, as she'd been warned it would. But he'd murmured apologies, moved carefully, and by the end, she'd felt something close to pleasure mixed with the pain.

Afterward, he'd held her, his breathing steady against her hair.

"Tomorrow," she'd whispered, exhausted and oddly content. "Tomorrow I'll finally see your face in daylight."

He'd pressed a kiss to her forehead. "Tomorrow," he'd agreed.

She'd fallen asleep in his arms, feeling safer than she had since her parents died.

But when she'd woken at dawn, he was gone.

"Emergency orders," her mother-in-law had said, standing in the doorway with a pinched expression. "Sebastian's unit was called back to the capital. He left before sunrise."

Alessia had sat up, clutching the sheets. "When will he return?"

"Who can say? Military business." Helena's eyes had been cold. "You'll wait here. This is your home now."

She hadn't known then that "wait here" would mean five years. That "your home" would mean a prison. That she'd never see her husband's face in daylight, never hear his voice again except in memories.


PRESENT DAY - CONTINUED

"Mama?" Dante's voice pulled her back to the present. "Are we going home now?"

Home. The Russo house that had never felt like home.

Alessia looked down at the divorce papers again. Sebastian's signature was already on them, neat and decisive. All she had to do was add her own and their marriage would be dissolved.

She'd be free.

The children would officially be fatherless, not just effectively so.

And Sebastian would never know that the "no children between us" was a lie. That he had three beautiful, intelligent, wonderful children who asked about him constantly. Who wanted to know why Papa never came home.

"Where's our papa?"

"Does he know about us?"

"Doesn't he want to meet us?"

No. She couldn't do this. She couldn't let him divorce her without knowing the truth.

Even if he didn't want her—and clearly he didn't—he deserved to know about his children. They deserved to know their father, even if it was just once.

"We're not going home," Alessia said, making the decision in that moment. "We're going on a trip."

"A trip?" Marco's eyes widened. "Where?"

"To the capital. To see your papa."

All three children went still.

"Really?" Lucia breathed. "We're going to see Papa?"

"Yes." Alessia folded the letter carefully and tucked it back into the envelope. "It's time he met you."


THE RUSSO HOUSE - LATER THAT MORNING

Alessia moved through her small room with methodical efficiency, pulling out the battered carpetbag she'd arrived with five years ago. Her hands shook as she packed—the children's clothes, carefully patched and mended. A few precious items: her father's last book, her mother's locket, the journal where she'd recorded the children's milestones and her own thoughts over the years—all the things she wished she could share with Sebastian but couldn't.

The children were in their room next door, packing their own small bundles under her instruction. "One toy each," she'd told them. "Something small you can carry."

She heard footsteps in the hallway—heavy, deliberate. Her heart sank.

The door opened without a knock. Helena stood there, her face a mask of cold disapproval.

"Going somewhere?" Her mother-in-law's voice could have frozen water.

Alessia didn't stop packing. "Yes."

"I see." Helena stepped into the room, closing the door behind her. "And where exactly do you think you're going with my grandchildren?"

"Your grandchildren?" Alessia's hands stilled on a small dress. "You've never acknowledged them as your grandchildren. You've called them burdens, mistakes, evidence of my shameful fertility."

"Don't be dramatic. I've provided for them—"

"You've done nothing!" The words burst out before Alessia could stop them. Five years of silence, of swallowing her words, of keeping her head down. It all came pouring out. "Sebastian sent money—I know he did, because I intercepted his letter today. He sent money every month. Enough for us to live comfortably, he said. Where did it go, Helena? Because it certainly didn't go to feeding your grandchildren!"

Helena's face went white, then red. "How dare you—"

"I dare because I have nothing left to lose." Alessia turned to face her fully. "You lied to him. You told him there were no children. You told him I was unfaithful. And I think—" Her voice shook. "I think you never sent my letters to him. All those letters I gave you to post. Did you send even one of them?"

Helena's silence was damning.

"You didn't," Alessia whispered, feeling the truth settle into her bones. "You never sent them. He doesn't know about the children because you kept my letters from him. And his letters to me—the ones you said never came—did they come, Helena? Did you hide those too?"

"I protected this family—"

"You protected yourself!" Alessia's voice shook with rage. "You were ashamed of me. Ashamed that your son married the daughter of a 'traitor.' You wanted me gone so Sebastian could marry someone appropriate. Someone who could help his career instead of being the embarrassing village wife with disgraced blood."

Helena's silence was confirmation enough.

"Well, congratulations," Alessia continued, fighting back tears. "He's offering me divorce. Just like you wanted. But before I sign those papers, he's going to meet his children. He's going to know the truth."

"You can't—"

"I can. And I will." Alessia picked up her bag. "Try to stop me, and I'll tell everyone in this village exactly what you've done. The money you've stolen. The lies you've told. Let's see how respectable the Russo family looks then."

She pushed past Helena and went to collect her children.

Behind her, she heard her mother-in-law's cold voice: "He won't believe you. And even if he does, do you really think an officer of the Royal Guard wants a traitor's daughter for a wife? You're deluding yourself."

Alessia paused in the doorway.

"Maybe," she said quietly. "But at least I'll know I tried."


THE ROAD TO THE TRAIN STATION - DAWN THE NEXT DAY

They left before sunrise, slipping out of the house while everyone else slept. Alessia had hidden her small bag of savings—every copper and silver coin earned from sewing work over the past six months—in the lining of her dress.

It was exactly enough for four third-class train tickets to the capital.

The children walked beside her in the pre-dawn darkness, silent and nervous. Dante held Marco's hand. Alessia carried Lucia, who was too small to walk the whole distance.

"Mama," Dante whispered. "What if Papa doesn't want us?"

The question broke her heart.

"Then at least you'll know you have a father," Alessia said. "And he'll know he has you. That's more than we have now."

At the train station, she purchased the tickets with trembling hands. The ticket master looked at her worn dress and thin children with obvious pity.

"Long journey for little ones," he said.

"Yes." Alessia tucked the tickets into her bag. "But necessary."

When the train arrived—black metal and steam, larger and louder than anything the children had ever seen—Marco pressed against her side in fear.

"It's alright," she murmured, stroking his hair. "It will take us to Papa."

They boarded, finding seats in the crowded third-class car. The benches were hard, the air already thick with the smell of too many bodies, but Alessia didn't care.

They were going to the capital.

They were going to find Sebastian.

And he was going to learn the truth, whether Helena liked it or not.

As the train pulled away from the station, Alessia looked out the window at the village disappearing behind them. She thought of the divorce papers in her bag, unsigned. She thought of her husband's face, which she'd never seen clearly. She thought of five years of silence and lies.

"Mama?" Lucia looked up at her. "Will Papa like us?"

Alessia held her daughter close. "He's going to love you," she promised. "All of you."

She hoped she was right.


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