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Rebecca stood there fidgeting with the rental truck keys, and that was when I noticed it—she was not standing in strength at all. She was beginning, in real time, to understand what she had actually married. Not some brave romantic hero escaping a loveless wife. Not a truth-teller who had finally chosen passion. Just a sloppy man who thought cruelty was power and logistics were something women existed to handle for him.
Declined.
She frowned and tried again.
She dug another card from her purse and swiped that one too.
Declined.
Ethan yanked his wallet out and thrust his own card toward the machine. “Use mine.”
“Shut up,” he snapped.
I crossed my arms. “Looks like the Vegas glow wore off pretty fast.”
Lily snapped, “You think you’re so smart, Clara. But you’re bitter, alone, thirty-four. What do you even have left?”
“What do I have left?” I said softly. “My house. My career. My freedom. And I don’t have Ethan. Honestly, that’s the best part.”
Ethan flinched so slightly most people would have missed it.
Panic flashed through his face before anger rushed in to cover it.
Then I said, almost sweetly, “Oh, and Rebecca? Your new husband’s company has a strict no-fraternization policy. I wonder how HR will feel about a Las Vegas marriage between coworkers.”
Her head snapped toward him. “You said it wouldn’t matter.”
“Rebecca,” he said through his teeth, “shut. Up.”
The air in the garage thickened.
Margaret made one last attempt to seize control through volume alone. “You’re vindictive, Clara. This is exactly why Ethan left. You always had to be in charge. Always making everyone feel small.”
I almost admired how smoothly she could step around a son who married his mistress in Nevada and still land on me as the problem.
“You know what,” I said, “you’re right about one thing. I do like being in charge of my own house.”
I looked at Ethan. “You have one hour to load up and leave. After that, the locks get checked again and whatever remains goes into storage under your name.”
They argued, naturally. Margaret called me cold. Lily called me pathetic. Ethan muttered vague threats about lawyers he could not afford. Rebecca stood in the middle of it all with her wrinkled white dress and failing certainty, learning too late that she had not stepped into a love story. She had stepped into a liquidation.
But they packed.
Box after box came down the driveway while the summer heat pressed against the pavement and the neighborhood pretended not to watch. Margaret kept issuing commands no one followed. Lily sneered at every load she had to lift. Rebecca went increasingly silent. Ethan sweated through the back of his shirt by the third trip and looked steadily less like a newly married man and more like someone dragging the full weight of his own stupidity uphill.
I stood in the garage doorway with the remote in one hand and watched.
Let them carry it, I thought. Every lie. Every fantasy. Every convenience they built by hollowing out my life from the inside.
I didn’t have to anymore.
When the truck finally drove away and the street settled back into afternoon stillness, the house did something unexpected.
It exhaled.
The furniture had not moved. The rooms looked the same. The refrigerator still chimed if the door didn’t seal all the way. The clock still ticked upstairs. But some invisible pressure had lifted, the kind you don’t even realize you’re carrying until it’s suddenly gone.
I should have known peace would not last.
It rarely does when wounded egos still have internet access.
Part 2
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