I Decided To Surprise My Wife At Her Office She’s The Ceo. At The Entrance, A Sign Read…
The New Reality
The divorce took 4 months. Lauren fought it initially, but Jennifer was right; the evidence was overwhelming.
I got the house. She got to keep her car and her damaged reputation.
The board investigation concluded that Lauren had violated her fiduciary duty by restructuring the company to benefit her personal relationship. She was forced to resign in March 2025.
There was no golden parachute and no generous severance. She was just gone.
Frank Sterling filed a lawsuit against both Lauren and Meridian Tech claiming wrongful termination. It was dismissed.
Turns out having an affair with your CEO and benefiting from unauthorized corporate restructuring is actually a fireable offense. Last I heard, they broke up 3 months after everything collapsed.
Frank blamed Lauren for ruining his career. Lauren blamed Frank for not being worth the sacrifice.
Neither of them took any responsibility for their own choices. I sold the house in June—too many memories, too many ghosts.
I bought a condo in Lake View; it was smaller, simpler, and mine. I started dating again in August.
It was nothing serious, just testing the waters and learning to trust again. It’s slow-going.
My therapist, Dr. Sarah Chen, is a clinical psychologist with 18 years of experience. She says that’s normal.
She says that betrayal trauma takes time to heal and that I shouldn’t rush it. I’m not rushing anything anymore.
I take it one day at a time, one choice at a time, and one truth at a time. I ran into Lauren once, about 8 months after the divorce finalized.
She was at Whole Foods looking at organic vegetables. She’d lost weight and looked tired.
Our eyes met and she froze. I nodded and kept walking.
She didn’t follow me. Part of me wondered if I should feel sorry for her.
She’d lost everything: her career, her relationship, and her reputation. But then I remembered Apartment 214.
I remembered the folder labeled “Future Plans” and the cold, calculated notes about building a case against me. And I didn’t feel sorry anymore; I just felt free.
Two years after everything exploded, I got a LinkedIn message from Frank Sterling.
It said: “I know you have no reason to talk to me, but I wanted to apologize for everything. I knew she was married. I knew what we were doing was wrong.”
He continued: “I told myself the marriage was already over, that we were in love, that it justified everything. It didn’t. You deserved better. So did everyone at Meridian. I’m sorry.”
I stared at that message for a long time. Then I closed it without responding.
Some apologies come too late to matter. Some betrayals don’t get forgiveness.
Sometimes the best response to someone who helped destroy your life is just silence. People ask me sometimes if I regret how I handled it, if I should have confronted Lauren privately and given her a chance to explain.
The answer is no, because she’d had 3 years to explain. She had 3 years to tell the truth and 3 years to choose our marriage over her affair.
She chose Frank. She chose the apartment.
She chose the future she was building without me. I just made sure everyone else knew what she’d chosen.
Three years after the divorce, I’m sitting in my condo on a Saturday morning drinking coffee and reading the news. My phone buzzes with a text from my girlfriend, Amy.
She is someone I met at a bookstore who knows my whole history and chose me anyway.
The text says: “Brunch at 11:00? I’m thinking that French place you love.”
I smile and text back: “Perfect. See you there.”
I put down my phone and look out the window at Lake Michigan. The water’s gray today, choppy with wind.
Behind me, my home is quiet, small, and honest. There are no secret apartments, no hidden lives, and no carefully constructed lies.
There is just truth: simple, painful, and free. And you know what? That’s enough.
That’s more than enough. That’s everything.
