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Chapter 2

last update publish date: 2026-05-20 18:19:15

The Things He Never Saw

Elena woke before sunrise.

She always did on days that mattered to her.

For a few quiet seconds, she remained still beneath the sheets, listening to the soft hum of the city outside the windows. The rain had stopped sometime during the night, leaving the world washed clean and gray beneath the early morning light.

Beside her, the other half of the bed was cold.

Adrian had already left.

Of course he had.

Her eyes drifted slowly toward the untouched pillow beside hers before she closed them again.

Seven years ago, she used to wake smiling beside him.

Back then, even his silence felt intimate.

Now it only felt far away.

Elena sat up carefully and reached for her phone on the nightstand. There were already three unread emails, two messages from her sister, and a calendar notification staring back at her screen.

Wedding Anniversary — April 17

The reminder felt strangely formal.

As though even her phone understood the distance between them.

A small ache spread through her chest, but Elena pushed it down the way she always did. Quietly. Neatly. Like folding away clothes nobody wore anymore.

She rose from bed and walked toward the curtains barefoot, pulling them open slowly.

The city stretched endlessly beneath the Laurent penthouse, silver buildings, wet streets, expensive loneliness.

Somewhere below, people were rushing toward ordinary lives.

Meanwhile, she stood inside a marriage so beautiful from the outside that nobody ever questioned how empty it had become.

Her gaze lingered on the skyline.

Then she whispered softly to herself.

“Happy anniversary, Elena.”

The words sounded pathetic in the silence.

A weak smile touched her lips anyway.

Downstairs, the staff moved carefully around her as she entered the kitchen. Everyone in the Laurent household had learned to speak softly around Mrs. Laurent.

Not because she demanded it.

Because sadness made people instinctively quieter.

“Good morning, ma’am,” the housekeeper greeted gently.

“Good morning.”

“Would you like breakfast prepared?”

Elena hesitated before shaking her head. “Just coffee.”

The older woman nodded sympathetically, though neither of them mentioned the untouched meals becoming more frequent lately.

While the coffee brewed, Elena’s phone vibrated again.

This time it was her sister calling.

“Elena.”

“You sound tired already,” Maya said immediately from the other side.

Elena leaned lightly against the counter. “Good morning to you too.”

“You forgot what day today is?”

A pause.

“No,” Elena answered softly.

Maya sighed. “And he?”

Elena stared quietly at the steam rising from her coffee cup.

“That’s not fair,” she murmured eventually.

The silence on the line said enough.

“God, Elena,” Maya whispered. “You always defend him.”

“He’s busy.”

“There it is again.”

Elena closed her eyes briefly.

Maya’s voice softened afterward. “Did he at least say something before leaving?”

“No.”

Another silence.

Not awkward.

Painful.

“You deserve better than this,” Maya said quietly.

Elena almost laughed.

Not because it was funny.

Because hearing that sentence after years of emotional exhaustion felt strangely unreal.

Deserve.

What a dangerous word.

People only used it when they were far away from the situation.

“I have to prepare for tonight’s banquet,” Elena said gently, changing the subject before the conversation could cut deeper.

Maya understood anyway.

“You’re still going?”

“I’m his wife.”

The answer came automatically.

As though she had rehearsed it for years.

After ending the call, Elena carried her coffee toward the living room where morning light spilled across marble floors. Her eyes drifted toward the grand piano near the windows.

She had not touched it in almost eight months.

Adrian once said he loved hearing her play.

That was before work became more important.

Before silence became normal.

Slowly, she sat before the piano bench and rested trembling fingers against the keys.

For a moment, she couldn’t remember the last song she played.

Then softly.

Music filled the room.

Quiet. Fragile. Beautiful.

The melody wrapped around the empty penthouse like grief dressed as elegance.

Elena closed her eyes while playing.

And for the first time in weeks, she felt something inside herself loosen slightly.

Not happiness.

But remembrance.

She used to love music before becoming Adrian Laurent’s wife.

Before her entire identity slowly rearranged itself around another person’s needs.

The song continued through the room until.

“Mrs. Laurent?”

Elena startled lightly.

One of the staff stood near the doorway holding a garment bag. “Your dress arrived for tonight.”

Right.

The banquet.

Reality settled over her again immediately.

By evening, the Laurent name would appear across newspapers and cameras. Adrian Laurent and his graceful wife. The perfect couple. Untouchable. Elegant.

Nobody would notice the emptiness between them.

Nobody ever did.

By six o’clock that evening, the city glittered beneath gold lights and polished glass.

Elena stood before the mirror while stylists adjusted the final details of her appearance. The black silk gown hugged her figure elegantly, soft diamonds resting against her throat like carefully hidden sorrow.

“You look stunning, Mrs. Laurent,” one stylist breathed.

Elena smiled politely.

Beautiful women were often praised most when they were unhappy.

Her phone vibrated again.

A message.

From Adrian.

Running late. Meet me there.

Elena stared at the screen for several seconds.

No apology.

No acknowledgment.

Not even happy anniversary.

Something small inside her chest cracked quietly.

Not dramatically.

Just enough to hurt.

The driver opened the car door for her downstairs moments later. Cameras already crowded outside the banquet hall by the time she arrived, flashes exploding endlessly against the dark evening sky.

“Elena Laurent!”

“Mrs. Laurent, over here!”

“Where’s your husband tonight?”

She smiled gracefully the way she had learned to over the years.

Elegant.

Composed.

Untouched.

Inside the ballroom, crystal chandeliers illuminated hundreds of wealthy guests moving beneath music and champagne laughter. Elena recognized nearly every face.

Powerful men.

Perfect wives.

Lonely people pretending otherwise.

Then.

“Elena.”

Her body stiffened slightly at the familiar voice.

Claire Holloway approached with effortless elegance, silver fabric flowing around her like moonlight. Beautiful. Confident. The type of woman who entered rooms already belonging there.

“Elena,” Claire repeated warmly, kissing her cheek lightly. “It’s been too long.”

“It has.”

Claire glanced around the ballroom. “Adrian isn’t here yet?”

The question was harmless.

Still, it stung.

“He’s delayed at work.”

“Still overworking himself.” Claire smiled knowingly. “Some things never change.”

No.

Some things never did.

Before Elena could answer, movement near the ballroom entrance shifted the atmosphere instantly.

Adrian had arrived.

Tall. Composed. Devastatingly calm in black.

People noticed him immediately the way people always did.

But what Elena noticed.

was where his eyes landed first.

Claire.

Not her.

Just for one second.

One brief second.

But after seven years of loving someone, one second could destroy you completely.

Claire smiled softly. “Excuse me.”

Elena watched her walk toward him through the crowd.

Watched Adrian lower his head slightly to hear her speak.

Watched something unreadable move across his expression.

And suddenly.

despite the music,

the lights,

the expensive beauty surrounding her.

Elena felt unbearably alone.

Because for the first time in years…

she realized she could disappear from Adrian’s life tonight.

and he might not notice immediately.

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Jhoyen Domingo
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Grace Taiwo
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Mystie
Damn! So sad!
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