I lifted my gaze. Alec stood just behind Billie, his silhouette framed in the doorway, his face expressionless, his eyes cold and distant. He looked at me, then past me, as if I were a stranger, a ghost.
"Alec is offering you a substantial sum, Cydney," Billie continued, her voice dripping with feigned sympathy. "Fifty thousand dollars. It's more than fair, considering..." she let the implication hang in the air, her eyes raking over my soiled clothes, my disheveled appearance.
Fifty thousand dollars. My blood ran cold, then boiled with a quiet fury. That was the exact amount I had in my savings account when I first met Alec. The money I had meticulously saved from years of working odd jobs, the money I had poured into his fledgling real estate company without a second thought. It was all I had, every penny, my hope for a future that had now been stolen. He was not giving me a settlement; he was returning my own capital, dressed up as charity.
Billie' s eyes gleamed with malicious pleasure. "I know it's not a lot, after all these years," she purred, her voice dripping with condescension. "But it's better than nothing, isn't it? After all, you didn't really contribute much to the company, did you? Just moral support. And now, well, your 'fame' won't exactly attract new clients to your little studio."
I gave a short, bitter laugh. It was a hollow sound, devoid of humor. Her words, intended to sting, merely confirmed what I already knew. She was reveling in her victory, basking in the glow of her usurped position. She thought she had won. She thought she had broken me.
I reached out my hand for the papers. I just wanted this nightmare to end. I wanted to sign, to sever all ties, to escape.
Billie' s lips curved into a triumphant smile. But as I reached for the document, she deliberately let go, letting the divorce petition flutter to the hospital floor, landing amongst the discarded coffee cups and candy wrappers.
"Oh, my goodness!" she exclaimed, her hand flying to her mouth, her eyes wide with fake contrition. "How clumsy of me! I'm so sorry, Cydney. My hands are still shaking from that awful incident earlier."
Alec, still silent and stony-faced, immediately stepped forward. He knelt beside Billie, his eyes filled with concern. "Are you alright, my love? Did you hurt yourself?" He didn't even glance at the papers on the floor, or at me.
I bent down, my movements slow and deliberate, and picked up the crumpled document. I smoothed out the creases, my fingers tracing the cold, impersonal words. I didn't say a word. There was nothing left to say.
I left the hospital, the signed divorce papers clutched in my hand, and drove to the house. Our house. But it was no longer mine. The moment I pulled into the driveway, I saw it. Boxes. My boxes. Neatly stacked by the curb, as if waiting for the garbage truck.
My heart sank. They had already cleaned me out. My cherished books, my art supplies, my grandmother's antique quilt-all summarily ejected from the life I once shared. I pushed open the front door with my key, only to find it didn't work. The lock had been changed.
A new housekeeper, a stern-faced woman I' d never seen before, opened the door, her eyes narrowed with suspicion. "Can I help you?" she asked, her voice cold.
"I'm Cydney Frazier," I said, a strange sense of detachment washing over me. "The... ex-wife. I just came to check if there were any items I might have forgotten."
She scoffed, a disdainful sneer twisting her lips. "The ex-wife? Oh, you're her. The barren one. Mr. Johns said all your old junk was on the curb. Didn't want it cluttering up the place for his new missus." She slammed the door in my face, the sound echoing hollowly in the empty space where my life once stood.
I stared at the closed door, a strange, almost hysterical laugh bubbling up in my throat. Barren. Junk. My contributions, my love, my very existence, reduced to nothing. I turned, my eyes scanning the sad pile of boxes. Then, I saw it. A small, porcelain wind chime, shattered into a thousand pieces, discarded among the debris.
Alec had made that for me, years ago, during our first difficult winter in that tiny rented apartment. His hands, usually so skilled at construction, were awkward with the delicate pieces, but his eyes were filled with a fierce determination. "This will remind you," he'd said, his voice thick with emotion, "that even in the harshest storms, there's always beauty, always a melody. And that I'll always be here to give you a better life."
He had given me a better life, in a way. A life of luxury, of material comfort. But the melody had stopped long ago, replaced by harsh discord. The wealth had grown, but his presence, his love, his promises, had dwindled to nothing, like sand slipping through cupped hands. The wind chime, like his promises, was now broken, beyond repair.
I looked at the shattered pieces, then at my phone. I had planned to call for a moving truck, to salvage what little remained of my past. But now, I simply couldn't. I couldn't bring myself to touch those remnants, those painful reminders of a love that had turned to ash. I lowered my phone, my gaze fixed on the broken wind chime, then slowly, deliberately, I turned and walked away. I left everything, the boxes, the shattered chime, the ghosts of our past, behind me. I walked away from the wreckage of my life, a woman with nothing but the clothes on her back and a heart hollowed out by betrayal.