My name is Sylvie, and after fifty years of marriage, my husband Walter walked out of our home carrying two leather suitcases and what remained of our life together. The afternoon sun poured through the kitchen window as he set a bank card beside my chipped blue teacup, a cup that had survived three homes, countless family dinners, and every season of our marriage. “There’s two thousand dollars in there,” he said without looking directly at me. “For emergencies.” I stared at the card, then at him, and finally at the suitcases waiting by the door. Outside, a red car idled in the driveway.
Marcy sat behind the wheel, pretending not to watch the house. She was the woman from Walter’s book club, the one who suddenly became the center of his attention after retirement. “Fifty years,” I said quietly. “And all I get is emergency money?” Walter sighed as though I were the difficult one. “Don’t make this ugly, Sylvie.” I felt something inside me crack. “No,” I replied. “You already did.” He muttered something about not wanting me to struggle financially and how this arrangement would be best for everyone. Best for everyone. The words nearly made me laugh.