He Signed Away His Kids, Then Ran To His Mistress’s Clinic Appointment-habe

The divorce agreement was signed at 10:07 on a rainy Tuesday morning, and Adrian Castillo acted as if the only thing ending in that room was an inconvenience.

He did not pause over my name.

He did not look at the custody section.

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He did not ask Attorney Bennett to read anything back to him.

He took the pen, dragged his signature across the last page, and checked his phone before the ink had even dried.

I sat across from him in a downtown family law office that smelled like lemon polish, wet wool coats, and coffee that had been sitting too long on a warmer.

Outside the tall windows, traffic hissed over the rain-dark street.

Inside, the printer at reception clicked and hummed, making copies of the paperwork that had split ten years of marriage into pages, clauses, initials, and signatures.

I had imagined that moment so many times that I thought I would know exactly how it would feel.

I thought I would break.

I thought I would shake.

I thought I would hear some final door slam inside me.

Instead, I felt strangely awake, as if every awful thing Adrian had said over the last year had finally gathered into one clear shape.

He was not a confused husband.

He was not a man going through a phase.

He was a man who had already left, and he was only annoyed that the rest of us still needed documents to prove it.

His sister Vanessa sat beside him in a camel-colored coat, her purse balanced on her knee, one polished finger tapping against the clasp.

She had come, she said, to “support the family.”

By family, she meant Adrian.

By support, she meant watching me lose.

Attorney Bennett slid the final packet toward the center of the desk.

“Both parties have signed,” he said carefully, his voice carrying the weight of a man who had seen too many people realize too late what they had agreed to.

Adrian barely nodded.

Then his phone rang.

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