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A Year To Find Forever

Chapter 1 

Word Count: 613    |    Released on: 25/06/2025

bly sleek corporate headquarters

or ten years, seven admiring her from the back of the house and three as her husband, he had lov

cost more than his monthly rent back in Queens. She was successful, driven, and completely emotionally di

n the laptop in front of her. He placed

ed your si

"Leave them, Ethan.

the bottom you n

er of annoyance in them before she registered his expression. She sighed, pulling the stack closer and flip

d hand froze over the

id, his voice hollow. "Our m

been looking for a book in one of the many sterile

Wesley Clark. They were laughing, holding hands, their faces close. It was a kind of happiness she had never, not once,

uncomplicated. He won' t get in the way of my career or my feelings for Wes.

edicated to a strategic move. The hope he' d clung to for so long did

. Her business-like composure was a mask, b

ly, isn' t it? My uncle' s c

his is because of you. And me.

the large office. "I have a business trip to Asp

nothing t

t, hailed a cab, and went back to the condo that had never felt like a home. He packed his few belongings: his well-worn cookb

ked out of Jocelyn And

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A Year To Find Forever
A Year To Find Forever
“My husband, Ethan, had been by my side for ten years, treating me with unwavering devotion, a quiet chef supporting my empire. I was Jocelyn Anderson, COO of a hospitality giant, a Wharton graduate, and frankly, too busy to notice. I saw him as steady, uncomplicated-a strategic move to keep my family off my back, nothing more. Then, he served me divorce papers. Not with a shout, but with a flat, hollow voice that cut deeper than any anger. He'd found an old email, a careless confession I'd sent before our wedding: I' d called him "safe," a "placeholder." He was gone. His things vanished from our silent condo, his number blocked. My family sneered, relieved the "gold-digger" was gone. But for the first time, seeing his absence, hearing their cruel words, I felt a panic I couldn't explain. I saw the empty space he left, the quiet support I'd taken for granted. A friend' s blunt truth hit me: "You'll wear him out." And I had. He wasn't just a husband; he was the anchor I never knew I needed. Now, he was free, pursuing his dreams without me. The thought alone was a punch to the gut. I chased him across the country, from Wyoming to Seattle, desperate to apologize, to explain, to salvage what I finally realized was precious. But he was cold, detached, a stranger. "You're just not used to me being gone," he said. "This isn' t love, it' s habit." Then came his ultimate challenge: "Hike the Skyline Trail to Panorama Point in six hours. If you make it, we' ll talk." I stood at the mountain's base, in designer loafers and a business suit, facing the impossible. I accepted.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 8