LOGINFive Years in Five Minutes
Adrian stood in the quiet kitchen at 6:07 AM. His shirt was untucked and his hair was sticking up everywhere. He hadn’t slept. He’d walked around the master bedroom until the first gray light came through the windows, then came downstairs for coffee. Instead, he found the folded paper on the marble counter. Dear Adrian looked up at him in Sophia’s neat handwriting.
He picked it up, thumb rubbing the fold. His eyes read the first lines.
I don’t know when I stopped loving you.
His jaw got tight. He leaned one hip against the counter, the edge pressing into his side.
I ate 212 dinners alone.
Adrian stopped reading. He looked toward the stairs. Sophia’s guest room door was still closed tight. He rubbed the back of his neck, then made himself look back at the paper.
I lost our baby while you were in Singapore.
His hand dropped to his side. The letter slipped down. He caught it before it fell and read the sentence again. And again. The words wouldn’t sink in.
“Our baby?” he said out loud. The empty kitchen didn’t answer. Only the soft tick of the wall clock replied.
He kept reading, shoulders stiff, breathing slow and careful. Every line hit like a quiet punch. When he got to the end — You just forgot — he folded the letter carefully along the old creases and set it back on the counter. His fingers stayed on the edge for a long moment.
Adrian walked to the stairs and climbed them one at a time. Each step felt heavier than the last. He stopped outside the guest room door, staring at the wood. He raised his fist and knocked.
“Sophia.”
Silence.
He knocked again, harder. “Sophia, open the door. Please.”
The lock clicked. The door swung open.
Sophia stood there in her robe. Her hair was messy from the pillow. Her eyes were dark with tiredness. She crossed her arms tight over her chest and looked at his face.
“You read it,” she said flatly.
Adrian nodded once. He stepped half a step forward but stopped when she didn’t move back. “I read it.”
“Then you know.”
“I know what you wrote.” He ran a hand through his messy hair, grabbing the strands for a second. “I don’t know if it’s true. A baby? You were pregnant? You lost it? And you never told me?”
Sophia’s eyes got wide. She stepped forward, pointing a finger at his chest. “I called you. Three times. You were in a board meeting. Your assistant said you couldn’t be bothered. I waited on hold for forty minutes before I gave up.”
Adrian’s hand dropped to his side. He shifted his weight, one foot sliding back. “I would have taken the call. You know I would have dropped everything.”
“You didn’t.” Her voice stayed low but sharp. She dropped her hand but kept her chin up. “You never did. Not once in five years.”
“I’m taking it now.” He reached out slowly, palm up, eyes locked on hers. “Tell me what happened. Please.”
“It’s five years too late, Adrian.” She pulled her arms tighter around herself, shoulders hunched. “I was alone in that hospital room. The doctors asked if they should call anyone. I said no. Because what was the point?”
He flinched, shoulders dropping. “Sophia… God. I didn’t know. I swear I didn’t know.”
“You didn’t ask.” She turned a little, eyes going to the window before looking back at him. “Not once. Not how are you, not how your day was, not anything real. Just ‘sorry I’m late’ and ‘big deal closing.’”
Adrian took another small step closer, close enough to smell her shampoo. “I’m sorry. I’m so damn sorry. About the baby. About all of it. Let me make this right.”
“Don’t.” Sophia stepped back fast, one hand coming up between them. “Don’t touch me. Don’t say you’re sorry. Don’t promise you’ll do better. I’ve heard every version of that speech. I’m done waiting for the man I married to show up.”
He swallowed hard, throat moving. His fingers flexed at his sides. “Then what do you want me to say? Tell me. I’m standing here. I’m listening.”
She let out a short, bitter laugh that didn’t reach her eyes. “I want you to say nothing. I want you to sign the papers.”
“What papers?”
Sophia turned away from him, walked to the nightstand, and pulled the drawer open. She grabbed a thick stack of papers and pushed them into his hands. Her fingers brushed his for a split second before she pulled them back.
“Divorce papers,” she said, voice steady. “I filed last week. They just need your signature.”
Adrian stared down at the top page. Petition for Dissolution of Marriage. The words blurred for a moment. He looked back up at her face. She wasn’t crying. She wasn’t yelling. She just looked really tired.
“You’re serious,” he said, voice rough.
“I’ve never been more serious about anything in my life.” Sophia leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed again, watching him. “We’ve been ghosts in the same house for too long. I’m done haunting it.”
He flipped to the signature page, thumb pressing into the paper. “When did you stop loving me?” The question came out before he could stop it.
She tilted her head, looking at him. “That’s the wrong question.”
“What’s the right one?”
Sophia met his eyes straight on. “When did you start?”
Adrian opened his mouth, then closed it. No answer came. His shoulders sagged.
“That’s what I thought,” she whispered. She reached out, grabbed the door, and started to close it. “Goodbye, Adrian.”
The door clicked shut between them.
He stood in the hallway, divorce papers heavy in his hand. His thumb left a faint mark on the corner of the page.
Adrian turned and walked down the hall to his study. The door creaked as he pushed it open. He walked to the big oak desk and sank into the leather chair. Morning light spread across the surface, shining on the pen holder.
He pulled out a pen. His fingers closed around it tight.
Adrian stared at the signature line. His hand hovered over the paper, pen tip inches away. The letter felt like it was burning in his pocket. The picture of Sophia’s bare finger flashed in his mind. The words about the baby repeated in his head.
He lowered the pen slowly toward the line, then stopped. His hand shook just a little.
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
Ashes in the DrawerVictoria locked her apartment door behind her and kicked off her heels with a sharp flick. The city lights glittered through the floor-to-ceiling windows, but she ignored them. She walked straight to the sleek black desk in her living room, fingers trembling slightly as she pull
Her ScentAdrian strode into his corner office on the top floor of Blackwood Tower and dropped his briefcase onto the desk. The city sprawled below the windows, but he barely glanced at it.Victoria leaned against the sideboard, pouring coffee. She looked up with a sharp smile. “Well? Is she final
The CarSophia stood close to the upstairs window, arms wrapped tight around herself. The divorce papers lay scattered across the hallway floor behind her. Down in the driveway, Adrian sat motionless in his black car, forehead still pressed against the steering wheel. Forty-five minutes had crawled
The SignatureAdrian sat at his desk. The pen felt heavy between his fingers. Morning light cut across the divorce papers like a knife. At 7:15 AM, he clicked the pen once, twice, then put the tip on the first page.He signed. Adrian Knight. Clean, sharp strokes. No pausing. No reading the small pr







