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My husband, Craig, got the promotion. After three long years stuck in a small town, we were finally going home to corporate headquarters.
But when I went to file our joint relocation paperwork, the HR administrator gave me a pitying look. Craig, she explained, had already filed a single-person relocation, listing a different spouse: his high-school sweetheart, Chanel Murphy.
A single, numb phone call to the county clerk's office revealed the devastating truth. I had signed my own divorce papers two months ago, tricked by Craig, who claimed they were investment documents.
He had remarried the very next day.
He used my talent as a top software architect to secure his promotion, all while orchestrating this cruel deception. I had sacrificed my own career opportunities for our future, a future he was already building with someone else.
The pain was suffocating, but then rage burned through my grief. I picked up my phone, my fingers steady. I called Elek Preston, the VP of Engineering, the man who had offered me a lead role on a high-stakes project.
"Is the offer still open?" I asked, my voice clear and hard.
Chapter 1
Dessie Hunt smiled at the signed promotion letter on her desk. Craig Snyder, her husband, was finally being transferred back to corporate headquarters. After three long years, they could finally leave this small town and go home.
She had already started packing, her heart full of hope for their shared future. All that was left was the joint relocation paperwork.
She had mentioned it to Craig several times.
"The deadline is this Friday. We need to file the joint relocation forms."
Craig always seemed distracted. "I know, I know. I' ve just been so busy with the handover. I' ll get to it."
Another day passed. "Craig, we really need to submit that paperwork."
"Dessie, can you relax? It' ll get done." He sounded impatient.
She didn't want to be a nag. He was the new manager, and his promotion was a big deal. She understood he was under pressure. But the deadline was looming.
Finally, on Friday morning, she decided to handle it herself. She was a software architect at the same company, after all. It would be simple. She walked to the HR department, a printed form in her hand.
The HR administrator looked up from her computer. "Dessie, what can I help you with?"
"Hi, I' m here to file the joint relocation paperwork for me and my husband, Craig Snyder."
The administrator frowned. She typed Craig' s name into the system. "That' s strange. The system shows Mr. Snyder has already completed the relocation filing."
Dessie felt a flicker of confusion. "He did? He didn' t tell me. Did he file for both of us?"
"No," the administrator said, her voice hesitant. "He filed a single-person relocation, but he also listed a spouse."
The confusion turned into a cold knot in Dessie' s stomach. "A spouse? But I' m his spouse."
The administrator' s eyes were full of pity. "The name listed here is Chanel Murphy."
Chanel Murphy. The name hit Dessie like a physical blow. Craig' s high-school sweetheart.
"There must be a mistake," Dessie said, her voice trembling. "Can you check again? We' re married. We have a marriage certificate."
"I' m sorry, Dessie," the administrator said gently. "The system is linked to the state' s official records. It shows his marital status changed two months ago."
Numbly, Dessie walked back to her desk. Her hands shook as she pulled out the lockbox where she kept their important documents. She took out the marriage certificate, the one she treasured.
She stared at the official-looking seal. It had to be real.
She spent the next hour on the phone with the county clerk' s office. The conversation was a blur of bureaucratic jargon and devastating facts.
"No, ma' am, we have no record of a marriage between Dessie Hunt and Craig Snyder."
"But… we got married three years ago."
A long pause, the sound of typing. "I do show a record for Craig Snyder. He was granted a divorce two months and six days ago."
"Divorce? From who?"
"From you, ma' am. Dessie Hunt."
The floor seemed to drop out from under her. She remembered signing some papers for Craig two months ago. He had told her they were investment documents, something to secure their future. He had rushed her, pointing to the signature line. She had trusted him completely.
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