The air in the room was thick and still. Outside the window, the New York sun was a brilliant, blinding white, but inside this climate-controlled office, Corrie felt nothing but a spreading cold that started in her fingertips and was now seeping into her bones. Her stomach, the very organ that was betraying her, gave a low, familiar churn.
She looked at Julian, a man she'd once spent sleepless nights studying with in the medical school library. His face, usually open and kind, was now a professional mask of concern. He was trying to give her hope. But the word 'hope' felt like a foreign language.
"No," she said. Her voice was a dry rasp. "No treatment."
Julian's professional mask slipped. "Corrie, don't say that. We have to fight this. Think of your family."
Family. The word landed like a stone in the pit of her stomach. A memory, sharp and unwelcome, sliced through the fog in her mind.
A year ago. Rain lashing against the windows of their penthouse. She was three months pregnant, a secret joy she was planning to share with Clayton that night. She'd slipped on a wet spot on the marble floor, a sudden, jarring fall. Then the cramping started, a vicious, twisting pain. Blood, bright red and terrifying, bloomed on the fabric of her white dress.
She had called him, her fingers trembling so hard she could barely dial. "Clayton, something's wrong. The baby..."
His voice on the other end was distant, impatient. He was at a charity gala. "Corrie, I'm in the middle of something."
"Please," she'd sobbed, the pain stealing her breath. "I'm bleeding."
A pause. Then, the words that had hollowed her out. "Bianca's not feeling well. She thinks she's having a panic attack. I have to get her to the hospital. I'll call you back."
He never did. She had taken a cab to the emergency room alone, signed the consent forms for the D&C with a hand slick with her own blood, and lost their child under the cold, impersonal lights of a hospital, with no one holding her hand.
The memory receded, leaving a wasteland in its wake. The light in Corrie's eyes, a flicker Julian had always admired, went out. She managed a smile that didn't reach them. It was a terrible, broken thing.
"I don't have a family anymore, Julian."
She stood, smoothing down the front of her simple dress. It was a mechanical gesture, an attempt to impose order on a world that had just shattered. "Thank you for your time."
She walked out of his office, her steps steady, her back straight. She left Julian sitting there, the untouched brochure a useless splash of color on his desk.
Outside the hospital, the city noise hit her like a physical blow-sirens, horns, the roar of a thousand conversations. She felt utterly, profoundly alone. She pulled out her phone, her thumb hovering over the contact at the top of her list. 'Clayton'. It used to make her heart leap. Now, it just felt heavy.
She pressed call. He answered on the third ring.
"What is it? I'm in a board meeting." His voice was clipped, annoyed.
The familiar sting of his impatience barely registered. The cancer had burned all of that away, leaving only a cold, clear purpose.
"Clayton Lawrence," she said, her voice even and devoid of emotion. "I want a divorce."
Silence stretched on the other end of the line. She could hear the faint, muffled voice of his assistant asking if everything was okay. Then, a low, humorless chuckle.
"What new game are you playing, Corrie?"
Before she could answer, the line went dead. The dial tone buzzed in her ear, a final, definitive insult. A single tear, hot and sharp, finally escaped and traced a path down her cold cheek.
Miles away, in a glass-walled conference room overlooking Manhattan, Clayton Lawrence tossed his phone onto the table. His handsome face was a mask of irritation, his grey eyes dark with contempt.
"Sir?" his assistant whispered. "Should we take a break?"
Clayton waved a dismissive hand. "Continue." But his mind was no longer on the quarterly projections. It was on his wife and her pathetic, endless bids for his attention. This was just another one of her dramas.
The moment the meeting ended, he loosened his tie, a knot of frustration tightening in his chest. He dialed another number. His voice, when he spoke, was transformed. It was warm, gentle.
"Hey. How about dinner tonight?"
The soft, sweet voice of Bianca Franks answered, a soothing balm on his frayed nerves. He smiled, the tension leaving his shoulders.
After hanging up, he made a decision. He wouldn't go home tonight. He would let Corrie stew in her own manufactured crisis. A night alone would teach her to stop this foolishness.
It was well after midnight when he finally guided his Aston Martin into the private garage of their Upper East Side mansion. He'd had a wonderful dinner with Bianca, laughing and talking in a way he never did with Corrie anymore.
He pushed open the heavy front door, braced for tears or accusations.
Instead, he was met with silence. And darkness.
A flicker of unease went through him. He flipped a switch, and the grand foyer flooded with light. The house was pristine, silent as a tomb.
He walked through the downstairs rooms. Nothing seemed out of place. He went upstairs, his footsteps echoing in the quiet. He pushed open the door to their master suite.
And then he saw it.
The walk-in closet, a room the size of a small apartment, was half-empty. Her side was completely bare. The rows of designer dresses, the shelves of shoes, the colorful collection of handbags-all gone. He walked into the master bath. The marble countertop, usually cluttered with her expensive creams and perfumes, was wiped clean.
All of her things. Every last trace of her. Vanished.
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