The judge had just said, “This divorce is final,” when I leaned over to my attorney and whispered, “Book the tickets.”
Ten minutes later, I was buckling my youngest into a seat on a plane, my two older kids sitting beside me in stunned silence, still clutching the small backpacks I had packed for them the night before. And across town, in a bright, cheerful maternity clinic filled with pastel walls and polite smiles, all eight members of my ex-husband’s family were gathered around his mistress, waiting to hear the heartbeat of the child they were already calling their future. They were smiling.
They were celebrating. They thought they had won. But what the doctor was about to say would change everything.
I didn’t cry when the judge signed the papers. That’s something people don’t understand about moments like that. They expect tears, raised voices, shaking hands, someone storming out of the courtroom.
But by the time you get to that day, the tears have already been spent. I had cried months earlier, quietly in the laundry room where no one could hear me over the hum of the dryer. I had cried when I found the first message on Daniel’s phone, something small, almost harmless on the surface, but written with a familiarity that didn’t belong to me anymore.
After that, the crying came in waves. In the kitchen. In the car.
Once even in the grocery store parking lot, my hands gripping the steering wheel so tightly they ached. But not in the courtroom. In the courtroom, I was calm.
“Mrs. Carter,” the judge had said, glancing over his glasses, “are you in agreement with the terms as presented?”
“Yes, Your Honor,” I replied. My voice didn’t tremble.
Across the room, Daniel shifted in his chair, his expression somewhere between relief and impatience. He had always hated long processes, paperwork, waiting, anything that slowed him down. He wanted this over.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇
