LOGINThe Letter He Won’t Read
Sophia sat at the kitchen table. The house was very quiet. The clock on the wall said 3:14 AM. She had a blank page in front of her and held a pen tightly.
Adrian was asleep on the floor outside the guest room door. She had shut the door on him earlier. She heard him slide down the wall and fall asleep.
She put the pen on the paper.
Dear Adrian,
She stopped and stared at the words until they looked blurry. Then she wrote again.
Dear Adrian. I married you because my father said our families would be okay if I did.
She scribbled it out hard, pressing the pen into the paper.
Dear Adrian. I loved you. I really did.
She crossed that out too. She put the pen down and pressed her hands over her eyes. Her shoulders dropped.
The floor made a small sound down the hall. He was still there.
Sophia picked up the pen again.
I don’t know when I stopped loving you. But I know when I saw it. Last Christmas. You gave me a check. You gave your assistant a necklace. I saw the box. I thought it was for me. It wasn’t.
Her hand held the pen tighter. She kept writing.
I bought you 47 gifts in five years. You bought me seven. I counted. I ate 212 dinners alone. I spent 19 birthdays waiting for you to come home. You never came home before midnight.
Her breathing got faster. She moved in her chair, crossing and uncrossing her legs.
I lost our baby while you were in Singapore. Did you know that? No. Because you never asked how I was. Not once. Not in five years.
She looked at the words. She didn’t mean to write that. Her other hand touched her stomach for a second, then dropped.
She kept going anyway.
I’m not writing this to make you feel bad. I’m writing this so I remember why I’m leaving. Because sometimes I look at you and I still see the man who held my hand at our wedding and said, “I’ll try.”
You didn’t try, Adrian.
You just forgot.
She signed it at the bottom. Sophia.
She folded the paper once, then again, and put it in her robe pocket. She stood up and her chair scraped the floor. She walked down the hall. Her bare feet were quiet on the cold floor. She opened the guest room door.
Adrian was slumped against the wall, his head down, tie still loose. His jacket was crumpled next to him. He didn’t move.
Sophia kneeled in front of him slowly. Her robe spread on the floor. She reached out, her fingers close to his face, then lightly touched his cheek.
His eyes opened. He blinked, confused, then saw her. “Sophia?”
She pulled her hand back fast and stood up. “Go to bed, Adrian.”
He pushed himself up against the wall, wincing as he straightened his back. He rubbed his neck. “I want to talk. Please.”
“Go to bed,” she said again, her voice quiet but firm. She crossed her arms and stepped back toward the door.
“I saw your ring on the plate downstairs.” He stood up all the way now. He was taller than her but stayed back. His eyes looked at her face, then at her bare finger. “Why did you take it off?”
She looked down at her hand and turned it slowly. “Because it’s heavy. And I’m tired of carrying things by myself.”
Adrian moved closer. He reached out but stopped. “I saw the food in the trash. The cake. The ring just sitting there. It hit me, Soph. Harder than I thought.”
She looked at him, her jaw tight. “You saw it after you came home. Not before. Not when it mattered.”
He ran a hand through his messy hair. His shoulders dropped. “I know. The merger calls went long. Tokyo time. I kept thinking I’d finish and get back. Then it was midnight.”
“Midnight.” Sophia breathed out, turning away for a second, then back. “I waited in that dress you bought me. The one you’ve never seen. I lit the candle. I set the table for two. And I got two words. Go to sleep.”
Adrian leaned against the doorframe, not taking his eyes off her. “I hate that I did that to you. To us. Let me fix it. Come back to our room. We can talk now.”
“Now?” She shook her head. Her fingers touched the letter in her pocket. “You’ve been asleep on the floor for hours. I’ve been in the kitchen writing things I should have said years ago.”
His eyebrows came together. He reached for her hand again. This time his fingers touched hers before she pulled away. “What things? Talk to me. Yell if you need to. Just don’t shut me out.”
Sophia’s voice got quieter. “I lost our baby while you were in Singapore. You never even asked why I was in bed for days after you got back. You just said you had another flight soon.”
Adrian froze. His face went pale. He stepped forward a little, his hand out. “Sophia… I didn’t know. Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Because you weren’t here to tell.” She held up her bare hand between them. “You’re never here. I counted the dinners. The birthdays. The gifts I bought that stayed unopened. I’m done counting.”
He swallowed hard. His eyes looked shiny as he looked at her. “I’m sorry. God, I’m so sorry. I thought giving you everything meant I was doing right. I was wrong.”
She stepped back into the guest room, her hand on the door. “Sorry doesn’t fill the empty chair, Adrian. Or the empty bed.”
“Stay,” he said fast, his voice breaking. He moved closer but didn’t walk in. “Don’t sleep in here again. We can fix this. Starting now.”
Sophia looked at him for a long moment, her fingers holding the door. “Goodnight, Adrian.”
She closed the door and locked it with a soft click. She leaned back against it, took the letter from her pocket, unfolded it, and read the line about the baby again. Her eyes stung. She blinked hard and folded it away.
She would give it to him in the morning.
Or she wouldn’t.
Sophia lay down on the bed and stared at the white ceiling. Empty. Just like every other night.
From the other side of the wall came three soft knocks. A pause. Then three more. The pattern happened again. He was still there, trying to reach her through the wall.
The StatementAdrian sat alone in his office long after everyone else had gone home. The city lights glittered through the floor-to-ceiling windows, but he didn’t see them. The desk lamp cast a small circle of light over his laptop. His fingers hovered over the keys for a long time before he started typing.He read the words out loud to the empty room, voice low at first.“I failed as a husband. Not because I stopped loving my wife, but because I stopped showing up for her. I chose boardrooms over our dining table. I chose deals over anniversaries. I chose silence over listening. Sophia deserved better than the man I became.”His voice cracked on her name. He cleared his throat and kept going.“She carried our pain alone. She waited for me through years of empty promises. When she finally left, I tried to undo it instead of understanding why she had to go. I let other people poison what we had. I let myself become someone she couldn’t love anymore.”The room was so quiet he could hear
GoneSophia sat on the couch with the TV on low. The news anchor’s voice filled the apartment like static.“…Victoria Blackwood has been arrested on charges of corporate espionage. Sources say she allegedly leaked sensitive merger documents to a rival firm in an attempt to undermine her brother’s company. More details are expected later today…”Sophia didn’t move. Her face stayed completely still. No smile. No tears. Just blank. Like someone had turned the volume down on her emotions. The mug of tea in her hands had gone cold.The door opened behind her. She didn’t turn around. She already knew who it was.Adrian stepped inside slowly. He closed the door with a soft click. “You saw.”She nodded once. Her eyes stayed fixed on the screen as they replayed the footage of Victoria being led out of a building in handcuffs. Perfect hair. Perfect makeup. That same cold smile even now.Adrian crossed the room and sat on the other end of the couch. Not too close. He rubbed his hands together, t
InvisibleSophia’s phone had become a nightmare she couldn’t escape. It rang constantly now. Unknown numbers. News outlets. Podcast hosts. Even a late-night talk show producer. Her old life of quiet anonymity was gone. The miscarriage leak had torn that door wide open, and Adrian’s public statement had kicked it off its hinges.She sat on the couch staring at the latest request. Another interview. This one from a major women’s network.Daniel sat beside her, leg brushing hers. He picked up her phone gently and set it on the coffee table. “You can’t hide forever, Sophia. They’re not going away.”She rubbed her face with both hands. “I don’t want this. I never wanted any of this. I just wanted to leave quietly. Start over. Now everyone knows my worst moment. They’re digging through my life like it’s entertainment.”Daniel turned toward her, elbow resting on the back of the couch. “I know. And it sucks. But ignoring it isn’t working either. The stories are getting twisted. Victoria’s pro
Who You Really AreSophia’s phone wouldn’t stop. She had turned off notifications, but the calls kept coming. Reporters. Old friends. Strangers. She sat on her couch staring at the latest headline when Daniel texted her the link.Adrian had done a live interview.She clicked it with shaking fingers.Adrian appeared on screen, sitting in a sleek chair, looking straight into the camera. He looked tired but determined.“I want to set the record straight about my ex-wife, Sophia Collins,” he said. His voice was steady. “While the company has faced challenges, Sophia was the one who helped turn the merger around. Her insights, her understanding of people, saved us millions. She’s brilliant. And she deserves credit.”The interviewer leaned in. “There have been rumors about a miscarriage during your marriage. Care to comment?”Adrian paused. He looked down for a second, then back up. “Yes. Sophia went through an incredibly painful loss while I was away on business. She carried that alone be
47 MessagesSophia sat on the couch in her apartment with the thick folder in her lap. The private investigator Adrian had hired had delivered it an hour ago. She hadn’t wanted to open it. But she couldn’t stop herself.The first page listed them all. Forty-seven intercepted communications. Emails. Texts. Voice messages. Some from her to Adrian. Some from him to her. All of them never delivered.Her hands started shaking before she even pulled out the first one.She read them slowly. One by one.The first was from her, dated almost three years ago.*Adrian, I’m scared. I think something’s wrong with the baby. Please call me back.*No reply. Because he never received it.Tears blurred the words. She wiped her eyes roughly and kept going.Another one. Her again.*I lost the baby. I’m in the hospital. Room 312. I need you.*She pressed a hand to her mouth. Her shoulders curled inward like she could protect herself from the words she’d written in the worst moment of her life.Adrian sat a
The LeakSophia’s phone started buzzing on the kitchen counter while she was pouring cereal. She ignored it at first. Then it buzzed again. And again. By the time she picked it up, the screen was already flooded with notifications.She tapped one open.*Blackwood Ex-Wife’s Secret Miscarriage Revealed: Sources Say Sophia Collins Lost Baby During Marriage*Her nerves tightened. The bowl slipped from her fingers and crashed into the sink. Milk and cereal pieces splattered everywhere.“Oh God…” she whispered.The messages kept coming. Texts from old friends. Unknown numbers. Reporters. Her phone wouldn’t stop. She scrolled through the headlines, hands shaking so badly she almost dropped it again.*Inside the Blackwood Marriage: The Baby Sophia Never Told Anyone About**Was the Divorce Triggered by Hidden Tragedy?*She sank onto the floor, back against the cabinets, knees pulled up tight. Her chest felt too small. Every breath hurt. That week in the hospital. The pain. The empty feeling af
731 DaysSophia stepped out the back doors of the Hamptons housed after the last camera flash. The black dress brushed against her legs as she walked down the stone path into the garden. The crew was packing up behind her. Daniel had stepped away to take a call. She needed air. Just a minute alone.
Black DressSophia stood in front of the tall windows of the Hamptons housed, the black dress hugging her figure. The fabric felt cool against her skin, bold and sharp. The photographer called out directions while lights flashed around her. She turned slightly, chin lifted, one hand resting on her
BlackSophia closed the door behind Daniel, the latch clicking softly. Her phone kept lighting up on the couch with new notifications, but she ignored it. Daniel stood just inside the apartment, hands still in his pockets, eyes flicking toward her laptop where the press conference clip kept playing
MutualSophia curled deeper into the couch in her pajamas, legs tucked under a blanket that didn’t feel like hers. The apartment stayed dim except for the glow of her laptop screen. A half-empty glass of red wine sat on the coffee table. She took another slow sip, the bitterness matching the knot







