He Rushed To His Mistress’s Ultrasound—Then The Doctor Went Silent-Candy

The pen felt heavier than it should have.

Julianne noticed that before she noticed anything else.

Not the mediator’s tired eyes.

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Not the quiet printer humming behind the desk.

Not even Marcus sitting across from her with one ankle on his knee, already smiling at his phone as if the marriage had ended hours ago and this was only a receipt he had stopped by to collect.

The pen was heavy, cold, and smooth against her fingers.

At exactly 10:03 a.m., she signed the last divorce document.

The mediator’s office sat in a low brick building beside a dry cleaner and a tax-prep storefront, the kind of place where people came in with folders and left with lives divided into pages.

The room smelled like burnt coffee, warm toner, and rain caught in old carpet.

Julianne had imagined this moment for years.

Sometimes she imagined falling apart.

Sometimes she imagined screaming until Marcus finally understood what he had done to her, to their home, to their children, to the woman who used to make his lunch at midnight because he had an early shift and still found a way to blame her for being tired.

But when the moment arrived, she did not cry.

She just signed.

Marcus noticed.

That bothered him.

For twelve years, he had been able to make her react.

He knew how to tilt his voice when he called her dramatic.

He knew how to sigh at a grocery receipt as if the apples and cereal were a personal betrayal.

He knew how to praise other women for being easygoing while Julianne was the one filling out school forms, booking dentist appointments, answering teacher emails, and stretching one paycheck into a whole month of small emergencies.

He knew how to make her feel like needing anything was a flaw.

That morning, she gave him nothing.

The mediator slid the last page toward Marcus.

He didn’t even read it.

He grabbed the pen, scratched his signature across the line, and dropped it back on the table with a little flick of his wrist.

Then, while Julianne was still sitting there, he picked up his phone and called Penelope.

“Yeah, it’s done,” he said, leaning back in the chair.

His voice was almost cheerful.

“I’m heading over now. Today’s the appointment, right?”

The mediator looked up.

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