The Runaway Astrophysicist And Her Secret

The Runaway Astrophysicist And Her Secret

Gavin

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After five years of a cold, empty marriage to tech titan Arlo Hatfield, I tricked him into signing our divorce papers, disguised as a grant application for my astrophysics fellowship in Chile. Just as my escape was within reach, I discovered I was pregnant. At the same time, I found Arlo doting on his childhood sweetheart, Brielle, who was faking her own pregnancy to win him over. In the hospital, suffering from a real pregnancy complication, I watched as Arlo rushed to Brielle' s side, completely ignoring my pain. He was so blinded by her lies that he didn't even realize I was carrying his child, assuming I'd just had a minor stomach flu. "Corinne, darling, are you alright?" Brielle cooed, her eyes glinting with victory. "Arlo and I just got the most wonderful news. Our little one is doing so well." He never even looked back at me. I saw the truth then: I was invisible to him, and so was our child. His world was built on power and lies, and there was no place for us in it. So I fled. I took our baby and disappeared to Chile, building a new life among the stars, far from his suffocating shadow. I thought I had finally escaped. Years later, after a catastrophic earthquake, he found me. Bruised, broken, and desperate, he begged for forgiveness. "I didn't know," he pleaded. I looked at the man who had shattered my world and held our child closer. "You didn't care to know," I said, my voice as cold as the space between galaxies. "And now, you've lost everything."

Chapter 1

After five years of a cold, empty marriage to tech titan Arlo Hatfield, I tricked him into signing our divorce papers, disguised as a grant application for my astrophysics fellowship in Chile.

Just as my escape was within reach, I discovered I was pregnant. At the same time, I found Arlo doting on his childhood sweetheart, Brielle, who was faking her own pregnancy to win him over.

In the hospital, suffering from a real pregnancy complication, I watched as Arlo rushed to Brielle' s side, completely ignoring my pain. He was so blinded by her lies that he didn't even realize I was carrying his child, assuming I'd just had a minor stomach flu.

"Corinne, darling, are you alright?" Brielle cooed, her eyes glinting with victory. "Arlo and I just got the most wonderful news. Our little one is doing so well."

He never even looked back at me.

I saw the truth then: I was invisible to him, and so was our child. His world was built on power and lies, and there was no place for us in it.

So I fled. I took our baby and disappeared to Chile, building a new life among the stars, far from his suffocating shadow. I thought I had finally escaped.

Years later, after a catastrophic earthquake, he found me. Bruised, broken, and desperate, he begged for forgiveness. "I didn't know," he pleaded.

I looked at the man who had shattered my world and held our child closer. "You didn't care to know," I said, my voice as cold as the space between galaxies. "And now, you've lost everything."

Chapter 1

Corinne Preston POV:

I pushed open the heavy oak door. The sound echoed in the silent, plush corridor of Hatfield Legal, a small but deliberate punctuation mark in the quiet of my planned escape. In my hand, the thick manila envelope felt like a shield, or maybe a weapon.

Five years.

Five years married to Arlo Hatfield, the tech titan, the man who owned half the city' s skyline and, until today, a significant part of my life. Today, that ended.

The receptionist, a woman with hair pulled so tight it looked painful, barely glanced up. "Do you have an appointment?" Her voice was flat, bored.

"Corinne Hatfield," I said, the name still feeling foreign on my tongue. "I'm here to finalize the documents." I slid the envelope across the polished dark wood desk.

Her eyes, framed by severe spectacles, scanned my face. I saw the flash of surprise, quickly veiled. "Mrs. Hatfield? I... forgive me. I didn't recognize you." She probably expected someone draped in diamonds and designer labels. I was wearing a simple tailored suit, chosen for its anonymity.

"It's fine," I said, my voice steady. "Just the documents."

She picked up the envelope, her brow furrowing slightly at its unusual thickness. "Are you certain about this, Mrs. Hatfield? Divorce is... a significant step." Her tone implied I was making a frivolous mistake.

I knew what she thought. Another wealthy wife, upset over a momentary indiscretion, ready to backtrack the moment her husband showed a flicker of attention. They didn' t know me. They didn' t know Arlo. They didn' t know the emptiness that had been my marriage. My resolve was a cold, hard stone in my chest.

"I'm certain," I confirmed, my gaze unwavering.

She shrugged, a subtle gesture of dismissal. "Very well." She stamped a document and handed it back to me. "Your lawyer will handle the rest."

I took the paper, the finality of it a cold comfort.

The Hatfield mansion loomed, a monument to Arlo' s power and my gilded cage. As I drove through the gates, the guard gave me a perfunctory nod, his eyes already drifting back to his tablet. I was a ghost in my own home, unseen, unheard.

I walked directly to Arlo' s study, a room I rarely entered unless summoned. But tonight, I was the one doing the summoning. As I neared the door, a muffled laugh, distinctly feminine, floated out. It wasn' t the house manager. It wasn' t a guest. It was her.

A strange, cloying sweetness hung in the air – gardenia and something musky, like stale cigar smoke mixed with cheap perfume. Brielle. She always favored those heavy, suffocating scents. Arlo, I remembered with a pang, had always hated them. He preferred the crisp, clean scent of rain and old books. Or, he used to.

My hand closed around the cold brass doorknob. The sound of Brielle' s voice intensified, a low, seductive murmur. My stomach twisted. I pushed the door open.

Arlo sat behind his massive mahogany desk, a glass of amber liquid in his hand. Brielle Yang, his "childhood sweetheart" and heiress to their partnering software giant, was perched on the edge of the desk, her hand resting intimately on his arm. She was laughing, a high, tinkling sound that grated on my nerves. Her dress, a shimmering emerald green, clung to her body, a stark contrast to my severe suit.

They both froze. Brielle' s smile faltered, her hand still on Arlo' s arm. Arlo' s eyes, usually as sharp and unreadable as flint, widened, a flicker of something-surprise? annoyance?-crossing them before a mask of polite indifference settled.

"Corinne," Brielle purred, recovering quickly. "What a surprise. We were just discussing the grant proposal for the lunar observatory project. Arlo's so busy, you know, but he always makes time for important work." Her gaze slid to me, a smug challenge in her eyes.

I ignored her. My eyes locked onto Arlo' s. He looked tired, lines etched around his eyes that hadn' t been there a few weeks ago. But they weren' t lines of worry or sorrow. They were lines of something else entirely.

I walked toward the desk, my steps even and deliberate. The manila envelope crinkled in my hand. Brielle watched me, her smile now a thin, tight line.

"I need you to sign something, Arlo," I said, my voice flat, devoid of emotion. I placed the envelope on the desk, pushing it toward him. It landed with a soft thud, a stark presence between them.

He raised an eyebrow, a hint of confusion in his eyes. "What is it?"

"A grant application," I lied smoothly, the words already rehearsed. "For my fellowship. It needs your signature as a... a guarantor, for the initial funding application. Standard procedure for spouses." My heart hammered against my ribs, but my face remained impassive. I' d spent years perfecting that look. Years of being invisible.

He picked up the document, his long fingers brushing over the formal typeface. My name, Corinne Preston, was printed clearly at the top, not Corinne Hatfield. He didn't seem to notice. Or maybe he just didn't care.

He had always been careless with my world, my dreams, my very existence. The memories flashed: his dismissive wave when I tried to discuss my research, his forgotten anniversaries, the cold bed that had been my only companion for so long. The loneliness had been a constant ache, a dull throb beneath the surface of my meticulously constructed life.

"Guarantor?" he mumbled, a slight frown creasing his brow. He seemed to hesitate for a moment, an uncharacteristic pause. Perhaps something in the phrasing, the specific legal jargon he' d skimmed over so many times, snagged his attention.

Brielle, sensing his momentary distraction, leaned closer. "Honestly, Arlo, do you think Corinne's little stargazing hobby needs your signature? She's an astrophysicist, not a child. Aren't there more important things? Like our meeting with the board tomorrow?" She batted her eyelashes, a saccharine display of concern.

His gaze flickered to her, then back to the papers. He seemed to weigh her words, her presence, against the mundane request from his wife. Brielle' s manicured finger tapped impatiently on his arm.

He sighed, a fleeting sound of irritation. "Fine." He grabbed a pen, his movements swift and decisive. With a flourish, he scrawled his signature across the designated line. The ink was black, bold, a final stroke. A final end.

I snatched the envelope back the moment the pen left the paper. My fingers trembled slightly as I tucked it securely under my arm. My heart was soaring, a wild bird finally freed from its cage.

"There, now that's done," Brielle said, her voice laced with mock sweetness. "Finally, Corinne can pursue her little passions. It's so sweet that Arlo supports you, even if... well, let's be honest, scientific research isn't exactly where the real impact is made, is it?" She chuckled, a dismissive sound, implying my work was trivial. Arlo remained silent, his gaze already back on Brielle, a small, weary smile playing on his lips.

It was almost perfect. Almost.

I wanted to scream. I wanted to smash the glass in his hand, to shatter the illusion of his perfect life. But years of silence, years of being overlooked, had taught me a different kind of strength. I simply turned. My departure was as quiet as my arrival.

As I walked out, I felt the lightness in my steps, the profound sense of liberation. It was done. The divorce was signed. He had signed away his marriage, his claim to me, his claim to... everything.

Before today, I was Corinne Hatfield, his wife, a name I wore like a heavy, ill-fitting cloak. But in that moment, walking away from the casual dismissal, the open betrayal, I became Corinne Preston again. My own name. My own life.

The marriage had been a transaction, a strategic alliance between two powerful families: the Prestons, a dying line of intellectuals, and the Hatfields, a rising tech dynasty. I brought intellectual prestige, a veneer of old money. Arlo brought raw power, ambition, and a complete lack of emotional connection.

He was a force of nature, a tech visionary whose genius blinded him to everything but his own ambition. Charismatic in public, ruthless in business, and utterly detached in private. He had courted me with the precision of a corporate merger, his words always logical, his touch always formal. I, a naïve astrophysicist, had mistaken his intensity for passion, his logical approach for a quiet devotion.

Our first kiss, a calculated move during our engagement party, had been like touching a live wire-brief, shocking, leaving me breathless and yearning. But that spark had quickly faded into the sterile formality of our life.

Brielle' s return a few months ago had only cemented the truth I had tried to ignore. She was a ghost from his past, a bubbly, vivacious counterpoint to my quiet intensity, heir to a software empire that was crucial to Hatfield Tech. She was everything I wasn' t, and everything he seemed to crave.

I remembered our fourth-anniversary dinner. I had dressed in the silk gown he once complimented, bought tickets to a rare star-gazing event I knew he' d find fascinating. He never showed. His assistant called, saying he was "tied up with an emergency board meeting." Later, I saw photos online: Arlo, laughing, his arm around Brielle, at a gala. The caption mentioned their "rekindled friendship."

That night, alone in the vast, empty mansion, staring at the untouched anniversary cake, something inside me had fractured. I wasn' t hurt anymore. I was simply empty. And determined.

The signed document was a symbol, yes, but it was more than that. It was my ticket out. It was freedom from the cold indifference, the casual cruelty, the suffocating loneliness. It was freedom from Arlo Hatfield, from his world, from Brielle Yang, from the endless cycle of being overlooked.

I was going to live my own life. A life filled with stars, not shadows. A life that was truly mine.

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