Chapter 20
Evangeline pulled out her phone, heart skipping when she saw Soren’s name flash across the screen.
She hesitated a second, thumb hovering over the answer button–just as the call cut
off.
Without thinking, she dialed back, but after barely two rings, the call was declined.
A message appeared almost instantly.
“Hey, Evangeline, sorry–it’s Poppy. I borrowed Soren’s phone just now. I was going. to ask if I could borrow your pajamas, but it’s fine now. Soren offered me his.”
Evangeline stared at the seemingly innocuous text, a hint of a smirk curling her lips. She knew better. Poppy’s messages always came dressed in politeness, but never missed a chance to needle her.
She felt strangely calm, as if nothing Poppy could say would touch her anymore. There had been plenty of texts like this before–each one harmless on the surface, all with that same underlying dig. She’d tried once, long ago, to talk to Soren about it, but any time she so much as questioned Poppy’s intentions, Soren would dismiss her, accusing her of reading too much into things.
But none of that mattered now. She was about to divorce Soren–she’d be setting them both free. If she could let go of the man, what difference did a piece of clothing make?
She typed a simple “Okay,” powered off her phone, and continued with the paperwork.
The clerk assigned to her was a young woman, polite and professional, who tried to persuade her to reconsider. Evangeline said nothing, simply pulled out a stack of photos–snapshots of Soren and Poppy together, all sent to her by Poppy or Soren’s friends.
In every picture, Soren wore his usual stoic expression, but Evangeline could s he was happy. Genuinely happy in a way she’d never been able to capture. She’d asked him, once, if they could take a picture together. He’d always brushed her off, claiming it was too much hassle, and would step out of the frame the moment she lifted her phone.
They hadn’t taken wedding photos, not even a formal marriage portrait. The one picture on their marriage certificate was a composite Soren had asked someone to
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cobble together.
There were too many signs that Soren had never loved her. So many, in fact, that if the clerk really had the time, Evangeline could have listed them for hours without repeating herself.
But she only shared a few. Even so, she could see the change in the woman’s eyes–she stopped trying to talk Evangeline out of it.
The process went smoothly after that. When everything was signed, the clerk told her she’d only need to wait out the thirty–day mandatory waiting period before the divorce would be finalized.
Thirty days, and it would all be over.
a
For the first time in years, Evangeline felt a wave of relief wash over her.
She thanked the clerk and turned to leave, but the woman called her back.
“Miss Whitmore.”
Evangeline stopped, glancing back in confusion.
The clerk stood, came around the counter, and wrapped her in a warm, sincere hug. Caught off–guard, Evangeline stood frozen for a moment. Before she could react, the young woman spoke softly, her voice gentle and reassuring: “Divorce isn’t the end–it’s a new beginning. You’re a wonderful person, and things will keep getting better.”
Evangeline was deeply moved. She believed, for the first time, that she could finally leave the Fawkes family behind, and escape the prison of her own memories.
Would things really get better? She didn’t know.
But as she stepped out of city hall, her emotions still tangled up inside her, she spotted a familiar figure–and her relief vanished.
“Evangeline! What are you doing here?”
The sneer in the woman’s voice was impossible to miss. Evangeline looked up to see her stepsister, Giselle Whitmore, emerging from a boutique across the str arms overloaded with a dozen shopping bags in every size and color.
After her mother died, Evangeline’s father, Winston Whitmore–who had once wept at his wife’s bedside, swearing never to remarry–had barely waited six months before announcing, “A house needs a woman. Evangeline needs a new mother to
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look after her.” And with that, he’d brought Hazel and her daughter, Giselle, into their home.