By now, he would’ve opened the email. The one I typed with calm fingers but a heart too fractured to feel the pain. Not out of rage. Not to punish. But from something colder than both. I returned to the table. My laptop screen still glowed, a single line staring back at me—one I hadn’t dared to say out loud until now.
The cursor blinked slowly, like it was waiting—for a revision, a softer phrasing, an apology. But nothing came. I could still hear his laughter from last night—sharp and cool, wrapped in polite cruelty. “She’s used to leftovers. She’ll manage.” I didn’t react then. But now, in the stillness of dawn, his words hovered in the air like fog that refused to clear.
He never knew the full story. The quiet sacrifices. The choices made in silence. The parts of myself I’d handed over so he could thrive. Under the glow of wedding lights and crystal glasses, something inside me broke. The woman he thought he knew—the quiet, ever-grateful mother—she didn’t follow me home last night. Someone else did.