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A Year To Find Forever

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 574    |    Released on: 25/06/2025

hands trembling as she unlocked the door. The first thing she saw was an envelope on the desk. Her name

fingers fumbling as she tried to call him. The call went stra

ase. We ne

receipt. She

om Aspen. Wh

lization dawned on her: h

through the rooms, a growing dread settling in her chest. All of his things were gone. His cookbooks, his

he center of his pillow. A

ce

my love was enough for both of us. I was wrong. I' ve spent a third of my life trying to earn a

mistake that I was the only one who didn' t see. I hope you f

t

ffocating. It was filled with the ghosts of his small kindnesses: the coffee he' d leave

per East Side townhouse. She went, hoping for some semblance of normalcy, bu

s wine. "He probably wanted a fat settlement. I

th a fury that stunned them all into silence. "He took his last paycheck, which he e

nst the floor. "He was worth more th

pulent dining room and return

andscape photographs hanging on the walls. There were breathtaking shots of Zion, Arches

family' s restaurant. His dream was to be o

, she knew exactly

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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