After The Divorce, My Mother’s Necklace Led Me Back To A Fortune-Teptep

After the divorce, I thought the worst thing Dylan Harper had taken from me was my home.

I was wrong.

He had taken the furniture, the SUV, the savings account we had built together, and the golden retriever who still slept with his chin on my old slipper.

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He had taken so much that when I walked out of the courthouse carrying two rubbish bags and a cracked mobile, I felt less like a woman leaving a marriage than a person being erased from a life she had helped build.

Dylan stood beside his lawyer in a navy suit.

He looked calm.

Satisfied.

The judge said the settlement was fair because the documents were clean, the accounts were separate, and the dog was registered under Dylan’s name.

The word fair sat in the room like a bad joke nobody was allowed to challenge.

Outside, Portland rain silvered the pavement.

Dylan opened the door of the SUV, paused, and lowered the window just enough for me to hear him.

“Don’t worry, Claire,” he said. “You’re resourceful.”

Then he drove away.

I spent the next six weeks proving him right in the ugliest possible way.

I took double shifts at a twenty-four-hour diner off Burnside.

I rinsed plates until my hands split at the knuckles.

I counted coins on the edge of a rented mattress in a room that smelled of bleach, damp carpet, and other people’s bad luck.

At night, I told myself that survival was not the same as defeat.

Then the red notice appeared on my door.

FINAL WARNING.

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