After Signing Away His Children, He Raced To Celebrate The Heir-heuh

The solicitor’s office had the careful quiet of a place where people came to end things politely.

There was a kettle behind the reception desk, a stack of plain mugs near the sink, and the faint smell of rain trapped in coats and carpets.

Outside, the pavement shone silver under a dull British morning.

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Inside, my husband of ten years signed away our life together as if he were accepting a parcel.

Adrian did not read the final custody papers.

He did not ask Bennett to explain the clauses.

He did not even pause when his pen passed over the line that ended his daily claim to Noah and Lily.

His phone kept lighting up beside his hand.

Each time it did, the corner of his mouth twitched with impatience.

He was already elsewhere in his head.

Not with his children.

Not with the woman who had sat beside him through a decade of bills, school forms, broken boilers, hospital waits, damp washing, and ordinary little Mondays.

He was at the clinic.

He was with Chloe.

He was with the baby he had started calling the heir before the divorce was even complete.

That word had moved through his family like perfume.

The heir.

As if our son and daughter were practice children.

As if Noah’s careful drawings and Lily’s school shoes by the door had become embarrassing reminders of a life Adrian had outgrown.

I sat with my hands folded over my handbag and let him believe I was beaten.

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