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At fifty-eight, after thirty years of marriage, my husband announced he was leaving me. It was for a woman I had mentored, whose powerful uncle had orchestrated my professional ruin.
My own son took his father's side. "Dad worked hard," he told me, his voice cold. "He deserves to be happy."
The weight of their betrayal was a physical blow. My heart seized, my vision went black, and I died alone on the floor of our empty house.
Until I opened my eyes.
I was young again, sitting in my husband's office thirty years in the past. He stood before me, handsome and concerned, about to ask me to sacrifice my career for his.
This was the exact moment that had destroyed my life.
But this time, I knew every lie he was about to tell. And I wasn't the same naive fool who would let him.
Chapter 1
Clara Castaneda POV:
The chill of the morgue still clung to my skin, an icy hand reaching for my heart, even as I walked back into the living hell of my empty house. It wasn't empty then, not really. It was full of memories, ghosts of a life I' d thrown away for a man who didn' t deserve a single breath of my sacrifice. My chest felt tight, a band of steel squeezing the last air from my lungs. I was fifty-eight, alone, and the only person who had ever truly loved me – my mother – was long gone. Brandon, my husband of thirty years, had just delivered the final, fatal blow: he wanted a divorce. Not for freedom, but for Cayla Scott, a woman I' d once mentored, a woman young enough to be our daughter. Cayla, whose uncle, a VP at AeroCorp, had orchestrated my original downfall. That was the real poison. It wasn't just betrayal; it was a calculated, cold-blooded ambush.
My son, Benard, stood by his father, his eyes as cold and unforgiving as Brandon' s had become. "Dad worked hard, Mom. He deserves to be happy," he' d said, his voice flat, devoid of any genuine affection. He believed Brandon's narrative, that I was just the stay-at-home mom, the secondary figure in their lavish life. He didn' t see the silent sacrifices, the intellectual battles I fought within myself every single day, the career I' d willingly, stupidly, tossed aside.
The anger was a fire in my veins, burning away the grief, the humiliation. It was a searing, blinding rage for the wasted years, the stolen future, the utter contempt they had shown for my existence. My heart hammered against my ribs, each beat a desperate plea for air that wouldn't come. My vision blurred. The ornate grandfather clock in the hall began to chime, its metallic rings echoing the death knell of my life. One… two… three…
Then, there was nothing. Only darkness. A suffocating, silent void.
The next thing I felt was the rough texture of a tweed sofa beneath my fingertips, the faint scent of stale coffee and industrial cleaner in the air. My eyes snapped open. I wasn' t in my empty, cold house. I was in Brandon' s office, the one he' d had thirty years ago at AeroCorp. The sun streamed through the window, bright and relentless, illuminating dust motes dancing in the air.
Brandon stood before me, his face a mask of concern, his hand outstretched. He was younger, his hair dark, without the silver at the temples that would come with years of boardroom battles and illicit affairs. He was handsome, in that superficial, charming way that had once captivated me.
"Clara," he said, his voice soft, laced with a practiced tenderness that now tasted like ash in my mouth. "Are you alright? You look a little pale."
My breath hitched. This wasn't some dream. This was real. I was here. Now. The clock… I looked at my wrist, no watch. No, the grandfather clock had chimed, right before…
Brandon' s face, so earnest, so vulnerable, was a punch to the gut. He was about to ask for my resignation. I knew it. I remembered it with horrifying clarity. This was the moment that splintered my life, the moment I chose him over myself.
"I'm fine," I said, the words a strained whisper, my voice raspy. I cleared my throat, forcing a semblance of normalcy. My mind raced. This was it. The chance. The universe, or whatever cruel god was pulling the strings, had given me a reset.
He took a step closer, his eyes scanning my face. "You seem shaken. The restructuring news… it's a lot, isn't it? It's been tough on everyone." He paused, his gaze dropping to his hands, then back to mine. He had perfected the art of looking burdened, of appearing to carry the weight of the world.
"Especially tough on those of us who might be on the chopping block," I said, my voice steadier now, a hint of steel I hadn't known I possessed.
He flinched, just slightly. A flicker of something – guilt? Fear? – crossed his features before he smoothed it away. "Exactly. That's why I need to talk to you, Clara. It's about us. Our future."
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