When I returned from a nine-day work trip, exhaustion clung to me, but beneath it was pride. I had worked overtime every evening, stayed late for meetings, and volunteered for additional responsibilities because the extra income mattered. David and I had once sat at our kitchen table discussing medical treatments we both agreed would shape our future, and every additional hour I worked felt like a step toward that shared goal. As my plane landed, I imagined him greeting me with relief, maybe even gratitude for the sacrifices we were making together. Instead, before I even reached baggage claim, my phone buzzed.
I smiled instinctively, expecting a warm message. What I found instead drained the warmth from my body. David wrote that he was leaving for Hawaii—with someone else. He added that he had taken our savings and cleared out the house. He suggested I “enjoy the empty walls.” I reread the message, certain I had misunderstood it. The terminal noise blurred into the background as the words sharpened. He had planned this. He had waited until I was midair to tell me. I felt my lungs tighten, but I refused to call him. I refused to respond.