I’m glad to have you here. Follow my story until the end and comment the city you’re watching from so I can see how far my story has reached. The divorce papers felt heavier than they should have in my trembling hands.
Twenty-eight years of marriage were reduced to cold legal language on cream-colored paper. I sat in my lawyer’s office, staring at Wade’s signature—so confident, so final—while mine remained a blank line, waiting to seal my fate. “Mrs.
Henderson, I need to be direct with you,” my attorney said, his voice gentle but firm. “Your husband has been very thorough. The joint accounts, the savings, even the retirement fund—everything has been transferred or liquidated legally, since many of the assets were in his name.”
I stopped listening.
The words became white noise as I watched snow begin to fall outside the window. At fifty-two, I was starting over with nothing. Wade had planned this meticulously while I trusted him completely.
Twenty-eight years of believing we were partners, and I was just the fool who never saw it coming. The secretary. Her name was Amber, and she was twenty-six.
I’d met her at the company Christmas party just six months ago. She’d complimented my dress with such sincerity that I’d actually liked her. The irony burned in my throat like acid.
“The house will be sold to pay off the debts he accumulated,” the lawyer continued. “You’ll have approximately seventy-two hours to collect your personal belongings.”
I nodded mechanically, my mind still trying to process how Wade had managed to destroy our entire life while I was planning our upcoming thirtieth anniversary celebration. I’d been researching cruise destinations while he was planning my financial execution.
Walking out of that office, I felt like a ghost. People passed by on the sidewalk, living their normal lives while mine crumbled around me. My phone buzzed with a text from my sister, Linda.
How did it go? Call me. I couldn’t call her.
Not yet. Linda had warned me about Wade’s recent behavior—his late nights at the office, his sudden interest in working out and buying new clothes. I’d defended him, called her paranoid.
The shame of being so wrong felt worse than the betrayal itself. The next seventy-two hours passed in a blur of packing boxes and confronting the reality of my situation. Friends who I thought cared suddenly became unavailable.
Apparently, word travels fast in small towns, and being the abandoned wife of a respected businessman made me a social pariah. Wade came by on the last day to collect some items. He looked younger somehow, dressed in clothes I’d never seen before—expensive clothes that Amber had probably picked out.
“Rhonda, you have to understand,” he started. But I held up my hand. “No, Wade, I don’t have to understand anything.
Just take what you came for and leave.”
He grabbed a few photo albums and his golf trophies. Twenty-eight years together, and that’s what mattered to him. Not the family pictures where we looked happy.
Not the wedding album I’d cherished. Just his golf trophies. “You’ll be fine,” he said as he headed toward the door.
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