When Wren’s husband leaves her right after learning about his fortune, she thinks he’s chasing money and freedom. But when the inheritance ends up in her name instead, Wren chooses silence over revenge. What he doesn’t know?
She’s already used it to rebuild a life he’ll never be part of again.
The night Ken got the call, his hands trembled.
He held the phone like it was glowing hot, and his eyes lit up in a way I hadn’t seen in years. We were standing in the kitchen, me in pajamas, holding Quinn’s bedtime story and him pacing in his socks with an urgency that made my stomach twist.
“There’s a will,” he said breathlessly. “Dad…
he left something big.”
“Like… how big?” I blinked.
“Half a million,” he whispered, a little stunned, a little giddy. “The lawyer said there’s paperwork, formalities, but yeah.
It’s real.”
I remember the way he looked at me. Not through me, not with affection, but like I was suddenly part of an equation he hadn’t finished solving yet.
“Everything’s going to change,” he said.
“You mean for us?” I smiled cautiously.
For the first time in years, I let my mind wander to possibilities. Paying off the mortgage felt like a dream. Finally taking that trip to Florence we always talked about.
Starting Quinn’s college fund. Maybe even getting the car fixed instead of pushing it another few months.
But Ken didn’t say anything else. He just nodded vaguely and drifted out of the room.
That night, he barely touched his dinner.
Said he wasn’t hungry. Didn’t kiss me goodnight. And the next morning, I found divorce papers on the kitchen table.
No note.
Just his signature. A pen resting diagonally across the top page like punctuation.
I stood there in my robe, staring at it. Staring at him across the room as he sipped his coffee like nothing was wrong.
“I need to find myself,” he said, not meeting my eyes.
“I’ve wasted too many years in this… life.”
“This life?” I whispered. “You mean…
our marriage?”
He nodded once, like it was a boardroom decision. Calculated and final.
“It’s not you, Wren. I just need to move on.”
Just like that.
Ten years, undone between sips of coffee and slices of toast.
I didn’t scream. I didn’t throw anything. I just stood there, feeling the way the air shifts after an earthquake.
It was too quiet. Too still.
Three weeks later, we were legally divorced. Ken was free. He moved into his father’s estate while everything was being finalized and drawn up.
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