nvelope that felt heavier than it should. I had expected a fight, a long, drawn-out battle. But David had s
my personal information, my social security number, my signature on a dozen shared documents, to streamline a process that would let him move on
work, but I was wrong. His car was in the driveway. As I walked up the path, the front door opened. He stood there, and b
, his voice strained.
I said, my voice cold. I tried to push
e, like a porcelain doll. "Scar, I'm so sorry. I never want
. And I was the bitter, angry wife standing in her way. David put a protective arm around her
he said to me, his
little touches that had made it ours were gone, replaced by a steri
le. He glanced at the screen. It w
ceiver even from across the room. Something about a doctor's appointment she couldn't miss. "I'll be right ther
mother's jewelry box. As I picked it up, I noticed something on the nightstand. It was a small, carved wooden bird, something I had given him on our first anniversary. He had told
ting by his car. He must have seen the look on my face, be
wait,"
f his hands on my arms was repulsive. It felt like a violation. I
words tasting like poison. "
ll away, and for a second, I saw the cold, hard man underneath. The man who had left m
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