The cream-colored envelope arrived on a Tuesday morning, its gold-embossed lettering catching the light as I turned it over in my hands. I didn't need to open it to know what it contained. The heavy cardstock practically radiated with Ashley's smug satisfaction.
I slid my letter opener beneath the flap and extracted the invitation. The flowing script announced what I already knew was coming:
*Mr. Ryan Mitchell and Miss Ashley Thompson*
*request the honor of your presence*
*at the celebration of their engagement*
The Carlyle Hotel. This Friday evening. Black tie optional.
And there, handwritten in what I recognized as Ashley's looping penmanship: *Sarah, we would be so pleased if you could attend. Your support means the world to us both.*
I set the invitation on my desk, next to the copy of Austen's *Persuasion* I'd been re-reading. Anne Elliot and her patient dignity had always resonated with me, but now her story felt like a roadmap. A woman reclaiming her power after years of quiet suffering.
My fingers traced the spines of the books lining my office walls—the one space in our Manhattan apartment that had remained truly mine. These volumes had been my companions through the slow death of my marriage, offering escape when Ryan's coldness became too much to bear.
"So this is how she wants to play it," I murmured to the empty room.
The invitation wasn't just an announcement—it was a summons. A public spectacle designed to humiliate me before our entire social circle. Ashley wasn't satisfied with taking my husband; she wanted to watch me crumble in person.
I moved to the window overlooking Central Park, the spring greenery a stark contrast to the ice forming around my heart. This apartment, this life—soon none of it would be mine. The divorce papers were signed. My application to the cryogenic program had been submitted without Ryan's knowledge. All that remained was to endure whatever final indignities they had planned.
I turned back to my bookshelves, running my fingers along the familiar spines until I found what I was looking for—a slim volume of Sylvia Plath. I carefully removed it and opened to a dog-eared page where I'd underlined: *"I took a deep breath and listened to the old brag of my heart: I am, I am, I am."*
This book would come with me. One small token of my former life to carry into whatever awaited me after the ice.
By Friday evening, I had armored myself in quiet dignity. My black Valentino dress was elegant without being showy, my makeup flawless but subdued. The woman who stared back at me from the mirror looked composed, unruffled—nothing like the turmoil churning beneath my surface.
"You don't have to do this," I told my reflection, but we both knew I did. Walking away would only fuel their narrative that I was the bitter, discarded wife. Attending would be excruciating, but it would be on my terms.
The Carlyle's ballroom glittered with champagne flutes and Manhattan's elite when I arrived. Conversations stuttered as I entered, curious eyes tracking my progress across the marble floor. I accepted a glass of champagne from a passing server and took a deliberate sip, allowing the bubbles to steady my nerves.
"Sarah! You came!" Ashley's voice carried across the room, deliberately pitched to draw attention. She glided toward me in a white dress that screamed bridal preview, her fingers intertwined with Ryan's. "We weren't sure you would."
Ryan, at least, had the decency to look uncomfortable. His eyes met mine briefly before sliding away, unable to hold my gaze.
"I wouldn't miss it," I replied, my voice level. "Congratulations to you both."
Ashley's smile tightened almost imperceptibly. She'd expected tears, perhaps, or a scene. My composure clearly disappointed her.
"Everyone's been so supportive," she gushed, tightening her grip on Ryan's arm. "Ryan's parents are over there—they've been absolute darlings about everything."
I nodded politely, taking another sip of champagne as Ashley continued her performance, draping herself across Ryan like a designer scarf.
"And now," she announced, raising her glass to the room, "I'd like to toast to new beginnings. And to Sarah—" her eyes fixed on mine, gleaming with triumph, "—for her graceful exit. Not everyone would be so... accommodating."
The room fell silent. All eyes turned to me, waiting for the spectacle, the breakdown, the scene that would become tomorrow's gossip.
I raised my glass in return, my smile never wavering.
"To new beginnings," I echoed, my voice carrying clearly through the hushed room. "May you both get exactly what you deserve."
As I sipped my champagne, I caught Ryan watching me, a flicker of something—doubt? regret?—crossing his features. It didn't matter. In just a few weeks, I would be beyond their reach, suspended in dreamless sleep while they played out their charade.
And when I awakened, twenty years from now, I would be the one holding all the cards.
I slid my key into the lock, the familiar click echoing through what felt like a stranger's home. The apartment was eerily silent—no rustling newspaper, no clinking ice in a whiskey glass, none of Ryan's typical evening sounds. Just the hollow echo of my heels against the marble foyer floor.
"Ryan?" I called out, more from habit than expectation.
No response. Just the weight of emptiness pressing against my eardrums.
I set my purse on the console table, noticing the absence of Ryan's keys in their usual silver dish. The engagement party humiliation was apparently not enough—he was probably with Ashley now, celebrating their public victory.
Moving through our—soon to be their—apartment, I traced my fingers along the wall, feeling a strange detachment. Seven years of my life contained within these walls, yet I felt like a visitor in a museum dedicated to someone else's past.
A flicker of light from the guest room caught my attention. The door stood slightly ajar, unusual since we rarely used that room except for Ryan's parents' occasional visits. Something pulled me toward it—intuition perhaps, or the quiet knowledge that I needed to see whatever waited inside.
I pushed the door open slowly, taking in the pristine bedding, the carefully arranged pillows. Nothing seemed out of place until my eyes caught a flash of red against the crisp white pillowcase.
A lipstick tube. Bright, unmistakable red—a shade I'd never wear with my coloring. I picked it up, turning it over in my palm. The gold case was warm, as if recently handled. Dior. Ashley's brand.
My fingers tightened around the small cylinder, not in anger but in confirmation. This wasn't new. This wasn't about a dying mother's wish or a convenient arrangement. This was an affair—one that had been conducted right under my nose, in my own home, for God knows how long.
I placed the lipstick back exactly where I'd found it, a strange calm settling over me. The last whispers of guilt about my cryogenic plans evaporated like morning dew. Ryan hadn't just betrayed me; he'd made a fool of me. Used our home—our bed—for his infidelity.
The doorbell rang, startling me from my thoughts. I closed the guest room door quietly behind me, composing myself before answering.
Two men in uniform stood in the hallway, clipboards in hand. "Mrs. Mitchell? We're here for the furniture removal and replacement."
I blinked, momentarily confused. "I didn't schedule any—"
"Orders from Mr. Mitchell, ma'am. We're to remove the listed items and bring in the new pieces today."
Of course. Ashley was already redecorating. I stepped aside, allowing them entry, a hollow laugh threatening to escape my throat. How efficient of Ryan—divorce papers signed and the exorcism of my presence already underway.
I watched in silent fascination as they dismantled my life piece by piece. The antique reading chair where I'd spent countless Sunday mornings with coffee and Austen. The Victorian side table that had been my grandmother's. Each item carefully wrapped and carried away, replaced with sleek, modern pieces that screamed Ashley's taste—all chrome and glass and sterile perfection.
"Where would you like us to put your personal items, ma'am?" one of the movers asked, holding a stack of my books that had been on the built-in shelves.
"I'll take those," I said quietly, accepting the weight of them in my arms. Our fingers brushed during the exchange, and the young man's eyes held a flash of pity that nearly broke my carefully constructed composure.
As they continued their work, I retreated to my office—the one room apparently not scheduled for Ashley's makeover yet. I placed my books carefully on the desk and opened the bottom drawer, removing a small, empty suitcase I'd hidden there days ago.
Methodically, I began selecting the items I would take with me into my frozen future. My grandmother's cameo. The first edition of Persuasion Ryan had given me on our first anniversary, before success had hollowed him out. A small photo album. Nothing that would be missed or noticed in the grand inventory of our shared possessions.
As I carefully packed each item, wrapping them in silk scarves and tucking them into the hidden compartments of the suitcase, I felt something crystallizing within me. Not rage. Not sorrow. Something colder, clearer, more powerful.
In the living room, the movers continued erasing me from Ryan's life, unaware they were helping me disappear in more ways than one.
Soon, I would be gone completely. And twenty years from now, when I emerged from my icy cocoon, neither Ryan nor his precious Ashley would recognize the woman I would become.