
Confronting the Ruin My Ex Caused
Chapter 2
The rain fell in sheets as Chloe buzzed me into her Brooklyn walk-up. My fingers trembled against the intercom, my body still weak from days of near-starvation. I'd taken the subway from Manhattan with nothing but a single suitcase and the clothes on my back, watching the gleaming high-rises of my old life fade into the distance.
By the time I reached her door on the third floor, my legs were shaking so badly I could barely stand. The door flew open before I could knock.
"Oh my God, Sarah!" Chloe's eyes widened as she took in my gaunt face and trembling form. She grabbed my arm, pulling me inside. "You look like you're about to collapse."
I did exactly that, my knees buckling as I sank onto her worn corduroy couch. The apartment was tiny—a far cry from the sleek penthouse I'd left behind—but it smelled like cinnamon and safety.
"When was the last time you ate something real?" Chloe demanded, already moving toward her kitchenette.
"Three, maybe four days ago," I whispered, my voice raspy. "Some saltines."
She muttered something that sounded like a curse and yanked open her refrigerator. "I'm making you eggs and toast. And tea. You need sugar."
While she cooked, I told her everything—the one-dollar Venmo, the receipts for Amanda's gifts, the $50,000 Hermès bag purchased the same day Michael had claimed we needed to "tighten our belts."
"That manipulative bastard," Chloe hissed, setting a steaming plate in front of me. "Eat slowly. Small bites."
The first forkful of scrambled eggs nearly made me weep. I hadn't realized how completely hunger had hollowed me out until that moment.
"You can stay here as long as you need," she said, watching me eat with worried eyes. "The couch pulls out. It's not much, but—"
"It's everything," I cut in, gratitude washing over me. "Thank you."
Later, after a hot shower and dressed in Chloe's borrowed sweatpants and t-shirt, I curled up on her couch and finally allowed myself to cry—not for the marriage I'd lost, but for the years I'd wasted believing I was loved.
* * *
Michael returned to an empty apartment that night. I imagined him finding my wedding ring on the counter, the closet half-empty, my toiletries gone from the bathroom. Did he call out my name? Did he wonder where I'd gone?
I never found out. He didn't call. Didn't text. Didn't report me missing.
What he did do, according to our mutual friend Thomas who called me a week later, was shrug when asked about my whereabouts during a business dinner.
"Sarah couldn't handle the upgrade," he'd said casually, his arm draped around Amanda's shoulders. "Some women just can't adapt to change."
I listened to Thomas's account with a strange detachment, as if he were describing a movie I'd once seen rather than my own life. The Sarah who would have been devastated by those words seemed like a stranger now—a ghost I'd left behind in that Manhattan apartment along with my wedding ring.
"He's already talking about marrying Amanda," Thomas added hesitantly. "I thought you should know."
"Thank you for telling me," I said, surprised by the steadiness in my voice.
That night, I pulled out my old art portfolio—the one Michael had dismissed as a "cute hobby" not worth pursuing. The sketches and designs inside represented dreams I'd abandoned to become the perfect wife. I ran my fingers over the pages, feeling something stir inside me that I hadn't felt in years.
Possibility.
* * *
Three months later, Michael and Amanda's wedding dominated the society pages. Fifth Avenue. Champagne fountains. A ten-tier cake. Her dress was Vera Wang; the flowers were flown in from Holland. The photos showed Michael beaming, looking like a man who'd won the lottery rather than one who'd discarded a decade-long marriage.
"To fresh starts," he reportedly toasted, raising a crystal flute as two hundred guests applauded.
I saw the spread in a magazine while waiting for my interview at Chen Innovations, a rising tech company looking for an in-house art curator. My portfolio—expanded now with new pieces created during late nights on Chloe's pull-out couch—sat heavy in my lap.
"Ms. Mitchell?" A sleek receptionist appeared. "Mr. Chen will see you now."
I stood, smoothing down the simple black dress I'd purchased with my first paycheck from the gallery where I'd been working part-time. As I followed her down the hallway, I caught a glimpse of my reflection in the glass walls—shoulders back, chin up, eyes clear.
The woman who stared back at me was worth far more than one dollar. And I was just beginning to discover exactly how much.
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