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The Ninth Goodbye: My Husband's Cruel Bet

Chapter 6 

Word Count: 813    |    Released on: 10/12/2025

ie

ty exhaust or the cloying sweetness of expe

all coastal town, letting the cold wind num

t Ga

chimed, not a jarring digital

ying canvas-a scent that used to be my entire world

t wearing a bespoke suit or a stiff collar. He was wearing a paint-s

tur

an C

eyes were the same. Calm. Deep. The kind of

he said softly, wipi

d. The rag fel

ll

elt stiff, like a mask I'd forg

looked at me. "I heard you w

way to put

ndary I hadn't even realized I'd set. "You look..." He paused, his ga

s in the corner. It was facing the

e because it was the only thing hid

the clo

ath hi

nished, raw. It was a woman standing on a brid

our junior yea

om corner. The date

ecise script: For El

s was busy buying Izzy drinks at the student union. Seven

s voice low, hovering right behind my

u keep it?"

rth keeping," he said. "Eve

the sky b

anes. It wasn't a warning;

ported me instantly back to the Montauk Highway. The bl

gs ga

t hit t

idn't hold me like he was possessing me. He held

oice a vibration against my spi

didn't ask questions. He went to the b

"You used to drink it

. He remembered my tea order from college

id, my voice shak

ing on a stool opposite me. He leaned forward

charcoal against paper. I watched his hand move-q

om his pad and slid

the last sixty seconds. It was me,

I didn't look broken

w I see you

my eyes. Hot

ankle, and I did something I hadn'

y arms arou

arms around my waist. He held me through the

llie," he whispered into my

me. They severed the last th

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The Ninth Goodbye: My Husband's Cruel Bet
The Ninth Goodbye: My Husband's Cruel Bet
“On the night of our fifth anniversary, my husband left me standing on the shoulder of the Montauk Highway in a blinding thunderstorm. His red taillights didn't even hesitate as they faded into the rain. He abandoned me there because his ex-girlfriend, Isabelle, called to say she heard a scary noise in her basement. I stood in my soaked silk dress, shivering not from the cold, but from the realization that this was the ninth time. He had missed my gallbladder surgery to support her at a polo match. He had missed my grandmother's funeral to fix her flat tire. But the truth was far crueler than simple neglect. Weeks later, after I survived a terrifying elevator accident that left me with a permanent limp, I overheard them talking at a gala. "The bet was for nine goodbyes, Marcus," Isabelle laughed, clutching his arm. "I bet you that I could make you leave her nine times before she finally snapped. And look at that. I won." My marriage wasn't a tragedy; it was a game. A wager between lovers who used my pain as a scoreboard. I didn't cry. I didn't make a scene. I went back to our penthouse, packed my sketchbooks, and vanished into the night without a word. Five years later, Marcus found me in a small coastal town in Maine. I was no longer the waiting wife. I was a celebrated sculptor, and I was holding the hand of a man who treated me like a treasure, not a toy. Marcus stormed into my studio, demanding I come home. My new husband stepped between us, calm and unyielding. "You're trespassing," he said. "I'm talking to my wife!" Marcus yelled. I finally turned around, looking at the man who had destroyed me, and smiled. "Ex-wife," I corrected softly. "And you're late. About five years too late."”
1 Chapter 12 Chapter 23 Chapter 34 Chapter 45 Chapter 56 Chapter 67 Chapter 78 Chapter 89 Chapter 910 Chapter 1011 Chapter 1112 Chapter 1213 Chapter 1314 Chapter 1415 Chapter 1516 Chapter 1617 Chapter 1718 Chapter 1819 Chapter 1920 Chapter 2021 Chapter 2122 Chapter 2223 Chapter 23