That phrase haunted me. Everyone said it—family, friends, coworkers. Tony didn’t hit me, cheat, or drink… so why was I unhappy?
Now that the kids were gone, it was just the two of us. I worked full-time, earned more than him, and still came home to cook, clean, and do everything else—while he watched TV.
One night, he called out, “There’s dust on the TV!”
“Then clean it,” I snapped.
“What am I, the woman of the house?”
That broke me. “If Sarah from work is so amazing, go live with her.”
I packed a bag and left, no plan—just an urge to find peace.
At a gas station, I ran into David—my first love. We talked briefly, and later, after my car broke down, he offered me a place to stay. Days passed. Old sparks reignited.
Then one night, he kissed me.
But the next morning, Tony’s message begged me to come home.
I packed quietly, only to overhear David’s plan with the mechanic—he had staged my car trouble to keep me there.
“You knew what I’d been through,” I said. “And you still manipulated me.”
“I did it for us,” he pleaded.
“No, you did it for you.”
I drove away—not to Tony, not to David—but toward someone I had ignored for years: