The kitchen smelled like cinnamon rolls and bacon at 3:47 in the morning, and I was standing there in my pajamas with flour on my cheek, arranging a fruit platter for twelve people who hated me. Let me say that again so it really lands. I was up before dawn, baking from scratch for my husband’s entire family: his mother Karen, his father Doug, his sister Jennifer, her husband Todd, their three kids, his brother Brandon, Brandon’s new girlfriend, and his grandmother, Nana Ruth.
All of them were sleeping peacefully in my house, in beds I had made with fresh sheets I had bought with my own money. And I was smiling. I was actually smiling, because I thought this was love.
I thought this was what a good wife did. Then the front door opened, and Michael walked in. He stood in the hallway with his jacket half off, his eyes red and tired, carrying the sharp scent of a long night and something floral that was not my perfume.
He looked at me standing in my apron, surrounded by enough food to feed a small army. Then he said one word. “Divorce.”
Not “I’m sorry.” Not “We need to talk.” Not even “Good morning.”
Just divorce.
I remember the exact sound the whisk made when I set it down on the granite counter, a small metallic clink. I remember the oven timer still had fourteen minutes left on the cinnamon rolls. I remember the coffee maker gurgling behind me, finishing its cycle like the universe was mocking me with normal life.
I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I didn’t throw anything.
I untied my apron, folded it neatly, and placed it on the counter beside the fruit platter. Then I walked past him, close enough to smell that floral scent, close enough to see the faintest smudge on his collar, and I went upstairs to our bedroom. I pulled out the suitcase I had bought for our honeymoon trip to Cancun four years earlier, and I started packing.
Seven minutes. That was how long it took me to pack up my entire life in that house. Seven minutes.
Because here’s the thing nobody tells you about being the wife who does everything: you don’t actually accumulate much. The house was filled with things, sure, but almost none of them were mine. I walked back down the stairs with that suitcase rolling behind me, each bump on the steps echoing through the quiet house.
Michael was still standing in the hallway, looking confused, like he had expected a fight. Like he had rehearsed for tears, accusations, bargaining. Instead, I looked him dead in the eye.
The story doesn’t end here – it continues on the next page.
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