My eight-year marriage ended over a photo of my husband, Drake, with his young associate, Kandace. He called her his #WorkWife.
That same night, he accidentally scalded my arm with boiling soup. Instead of taking me to the hospital, he left me stranded on the side of the road to comfort Kandace over a headache.
His cruelty brought back a buried memory: the night his negligence caused me to miscarry our child, a loss he twisted to blame entirely on me.
The final blow came when I saw it-a matching tattoo on Kandace' s wrist, the same one Drake had over his heart. This wasn't just an affair; I was being replaced.
He begged, cried, and even carved the tattoo from his own chest in a bloody display of desperation. He swore he loved me and couldn't live without me.
So when the hospital called to say he was in a critical car accident, fighting for his life, I listened calmly.
"I'm sorry," I said, my voice perfectly clear. "You have the wrong number."
Chapter 1
Eliza POV:
My eight-year marriage ended with a single tap on a glass screen.
The photo appeared without warning, wedged between a picture of my best friend Jolene' s cat and an ad for sustainable furniture. It was Drake, my husband, his arm slung casually around his young associate, Kandace Hill. They were in his gleaming corner office, the one I' d helped him design, the one with the panoramic view of the city that was supposed to be our view.
They were smiling. Not corporate, polite smiles, but genuine, crinkle-at-the-eyes smiles. Kandace' s head was tilted just so, leaning into his shoulder as if it were the most natural thing in the world. Drake' s hand rested comfortably on her waist, his thumb stroking the fabric of her blouse.
The caption was the final twist of the knife.
"Couldn' t get through these late nights without my amazing #WorkWife! @KandaceHill"
For a full minute, I just stared. My heart didn' t pound. My stomach didn' t drop. There was no hot rush of anger or icy wave of dread. There was only a profound, hollow stillness.
The old Eliza would have thrown her phone across the room. She would have shattered the screen, the sound of splintering glass a pale imitation of the chaos in her heart. She would have called him, screaming, crying, demanding an explanation he would never properly give.
But the old Eliza was gone. She had died slowly, piece by piece, over eight long years of broken promises and casual cruelties. This photo was not a murder weapon; it was just the confirmation of death.
My thumb moved with a life of its own, hovering over the little heart icon. I double-tapped. The heart filled in, a small, blood-red confirmation of my acknowledgment.
My phone screen refreshed a moment later. The post was gone. Vanished, as if it had never existed. But the digital ghost of it lingered, seared onto the back of my eyelids. He had posted it, seen my 'like,' and deleted it. A test. A taunt.
Seconds later, my phone buzzed with an incoming video call. Drake' s face filled the screen, handsome and furious. In the background, I could see the blurred figures of his team. Kandace was one of them, her face blotchy, her eyes red as if she' d been crying.
"What the hell was that, Eliza?" he boomed, his voice too loud for the phone' s small speaker. He wasn' t asking, he was accusing.
I kept my own voice level, a flat, calm plain. "What was what, Drake?"
"The 'like.' Don' t play dumb with me. You know exactly what I' m talking about. Kandace is mortified. My whole team saw it. Now everyone is whispering."
He berated me, a tech CEO dressing down a clumsy intern, not a husband speaking to his wife.
"It was a joke, Eliza. A joke. Do you not have a sense of humor anymore? God, you' re so uptight."
I watched him, this man whose every mood I once charted like the weather, and felt nothing. The insults, disguised as jokes, had been his weapon of choice for years. They used to leave me raw, questioning my own sanity. Now, they were just noise.
"You' re making a scene over nothing. Don' t be so stupid," he said, his voice dropping to a hiss.
Stupid. That was his favorite. He used it whenever I failed to anticipate his needs, whenever I had an opinion that differed from his, whenever I was inconveniently human.
I didn' t argue. I didn' t defend myself. I didn' t cry.
I simply said, "Okay," and watched the confusion flicker in his eyes.
He expected a fight. He craved the drama, the tears, the passionate, messy reconciliation that would follow, reaffirming his irresistible power over me. My indifference was a language he didn' t speak. It was a lock he didn' t have the key for.
He hung up. I lowered the phone, the screen dark, and for the first time in a long time, I felt a sliver of peace. The war was over. Not because I had won, but because I had finally put down my weapons and walked off the battlefield.
He thought my 'like' on that photo was an act of war. He was wrong.
It was a signature on a death certificate.
Eliza POV:
The front door clicked open just after midnight. I was in the kitchen, methodically wiping down the marble countertops, the scent of lemon and bleach a clean, sharp counterpoint to the lingering sweetness of birthday cake.
It was Drake' s birthday. I' d taken the afternoon off from the architectural firm, the one I' d been a junior partner at before I downshifted my career to support his. I had spent hours baking his favorite red velvet cake from scratch, the one his mother used to make. I' d cooked a full dinner, the dishes now sitting cold and untouched on the stove.
He had promised to be home by seven. "A quick drink with the team to celebrate the merger, then I' m all yours, babe," he' d texted.
I waited until eleven before I saw the pictures. Not from him, but from one of Kandace' s friends on Instagram. A carousel of photos from a chic downtown bar: Drake with his arm around Kandace as she blew out a single candle on a cupcake, Drake laughing as she playfully smeared frosting on his nose, the whole team raising champagne glasses in a toast.
He walked into the kitchen now, loosening his tie, a picture of weary success. He sniffed the air.
"Did you bake?" he asked, his tone deceptively casual. He walked over to the cake, still perfect under its glass dome, and dipped a finger into the cream cheese frosting.
He turned and, before I could react, smeared the white cream across my cheek. It was a gesture that was meant to be playful, intimate. Years ago, I would have laughed.
Tonight, I just stood there.
"It' s red velvet," I said, my voice flat.
"You made it?"
"Yes."
He licked the frosting from his finger, then frowned. "It' s a little lumpy. And the color' s off. Looks more like a sad brick than velvet."
The old Eliza would have defended her efforts, reminding him that she' d spent hours trying to get it just right, that it was the thought that counted. The new Eliza simply picked up a napkin, wiped the frosting from her face, and tossed it into the trash. There was no point arguing with a critique that wasn' t about the cake at all.
He watched me, a small frown line appearing between his brows. He was expecting a reaction, a spark to ignite his favorite game of fight-and-make-up. He got nothing.
"Hey," he said, his voice softening. The love-bombing phase was about to begin. "I brought you something."
He pulled a white paper bag from his briefcase. "Your favorite spicy chicken from that place downtown."
"I saw it on Kandace' s story," I said, my voice devoid of accusation. It was a simple statement of fact.
His face tightened for a fraction of a second. "Right. Well, I saved you some. Let me just heat it up for you."
He took the container to the microwave, fumbling with the settings like a tourist in his own kitchen. A moment later, he disappeared into our bedroom to change. I heard the shower turn on.
A burning smell began to fill the kitchen. The microwave beeped insistently, but the shower was still running. With a sigh, I walked over and pulled the door open. A cloud of acrid smoke billowed out. He' d put the plastic container in for five minutes instead of one.
As I reached to unplug the smoking appliance, his phone, left on the counter, lit up. It was a text message from Kandace.
"Tonight was perfect. Can' t wait to make all your future birthdays this special. "
The bathroom door opened. Drake emerged, toweling his hair, a fresh shirt slung over his shoulder. He saw me standing by the counter, his phone illuminated in my hand. His face darkened.
"What are you doing, snooping through my phone?" he snarled, striding towards me.
He moved too fast. Or maybe I moved too slow, my limbs still heavy with the day' s exhaustion. He snatched the phone from my grasp, his shoulder slamming into mine.
The momentum sent me stumbling backward. My bandaged hand, the one I' d burned on the oven rack while pulling out his stupid cake, hit the pot of now-congealed soup on the stove.
The pot tipped.
A wave of scalding, greasy liquid cascaded down my arm. A searing, white-hot pain shot from my wrist to my elbow. I cried out, a sharp, involuntary sound.
The pot clattered to the floor, splashing soup across the pristine tiles I had just mopped.
Drake didn' t look at me. He didn' t look at my arm, which was already turning an angry, blistering red.
He was staring at his phone, his thumb furiously deleting Kandace' s message.
Eliza POV:
Drake finally looked up from his phone, his eyes scanning over my arm with a detached, clinical gaze, as if assessing a minor crack in the plaster. The skin was already blistering, an angry red map of pain.
"Fine," he sighed, the word heavy with martyrdom. "I' ll take you to urgent care."
It wasn' t an offer of comfort. It was a concession, an annoyance he had to deal with before he could get back to more important things. I nodded numbly, the pain a low thrumming that was quickly escalating into a roar.
I followed him out to his car, a sleek, black Tesla that was his pride and joy. As I slid into the passenger seat, my eyes landed on a small, glittery pink air freshener dangling from the rearview mirror. It was shaped like the letter 'K' and smelled cloyingly of strawberries and vanilla.
Drake saw me looking at it. He fumbled to unhook it, his movements jerky and panicked. "It' s from Kandace. A joke gift. For the merger. It' s stupid, I' ll take it down."
"It' s cute," I said, my voice a monotone. The pain in my arm was a rising tide, washing out all other emotions.
A tense silence filled the car. He kept glancing at me, his brow furrowed in confusion. "You' re not... going to throw it out the window?"
The old Eliza would have. She would have ripped it from the mirror and flung it into the night, a small, pathetic act of defiance. She would have screamed at him, demanded to know why another woman' s initial was hanging in their shared space.
"Why would I do that?" I asked, genuinely curious. "It' s your car, Drake. You can hang whatever you want in it."
I turned to look out the window, the city lights blurring past. The pain was making me nauseous. "Can you please just drive? The clinic closes in an hour."
He stomped on the accelerator, the Tesla lurching forward. We drove for five minutes in that suffocating silence before his phone chimed with a custom ringtone-a soft, tinkling melody I' d never heard before.
He answered on speaker. "Kandace? What' s wrong?"
Her voice was small and tearful. "Drake... I don' t feel well. I think the champagne went to my head. My everything is spinning..."
He hung up without saying goodbye to her. He didn' t say a word to me either. He just executed a sharp, illegal U-turn, the tires screeching in protest.
He was heading away from the urgent care.
He reached into the glove compartment and pulled out a small first-aid kit. He tossed a tube of burn cream and a roll of gauze into my lap.
"Look, I have to go check on Kandace. She lives just around the corner. She gets terrible migraines when she' s stressed. I' ll be back in twenty minutes, tops. You can call a ride-share if you want."
He pulled over to the curb, leaving the car running. He didn' t wait for my response. He was already out the door, jogging toward a brightly lit apartment building, his phone pressed to his ear.
I sat there for an hour. The twenty minutes came and went. The car' s battery was low, and the AC began to sputter, pumping hot, stale air into the small space. The city' s heat wave pressed in on the glass, turning the car into an oven. Sweat trickled down my back, stinging the raw skin on my arm.
My vision started to blur at the edges. The pain was more than I could bear.
I looked at the passenger-side window. I looked at the emergency glass breaker tool I always kept in my purse.
With a shaking hand, I took it out. The sound of the window shattering was the loudest, most liberating sound I had ever heard. A car screeched to a halt beside me, the driver a kind-faced woman with wide, worried eyes.
"My God, are you okay? Do you need a ride to the hospital?"
For the first time that night, tears pricked my eyes. Not for Drake, not for my marriage, but for the simple, unexpected kindness of a stranger.
"Yes," I whispered, my voice cracking. "Yes, please."