He Threw His Wife Out In The Rain. The Neighbor Had A Secret-hihehu

The night Julian Vale threw me out, the rain hit our street so hard it made the pavement look like cracked black glass.

It ran down the gutters in silver ropes.

It slapped against the driveway, bounced off the mailbox, and soaked straight through the thin cardigan I had thrown on after dinner.

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He had not even let me take an umbrella.

“Three years,” Julian said from the doorway of the colonial house where I had paid half the mortgage and all of the emotional interest. “Three useless years, Clara. No child. No legacy. Nothing.”

His voice was low enough for the neighbors not to hear, but sharp enough for me to understand every word.

Behind him stood his mother, Evelyn, holding a cup of chamomile tea like she was attending a polite little performance.

She smiled over the gold rim.

On the staircase behind her, Chloe leaned against the mahogany railing in my ivory silk robe.

My robe.

The one I bought for myself after my second surgery because I needed one thing in that house that felt soft against my skin.

I looked at the suitcase Julian had packed for me.

Two sweaters.

One pair of sensible shoes.

A zippered bag of toiletries.

My grandmother’s photo, cracked diagonally across her face.

“That’s all?” I asked.

Julian’s mouth pulled to one side. “You should be profoundly grateful I’m not asking for financial compensation.”

“For what?”

“For wasting my youth.”

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