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Ferris Wheel Farewell Novel Cover

Ferris Wheel Farewell

The quiet of Sunday morning wrapped around me like a familiar blanket as I scrolled through my phone, sipping coffee from my favorite mug—the one Jonathan had given me for our third anniversary. Outside, rain pattered against the windows of our apartment, creating a gentle rhythm that normally would have soothed me. But today, my heart wasn't finding peace in the rain's melody. I hadn't meant to check Jonathan's tagged photos. It had become a habit born from loneliness, this digital window into the parts of my husband's life I wasn't allowed to share. My thumb paused mid-scroll as a splash of color caught my eye—the unmistakable vibrant hues of Wonder World amusement park. Time seemed to slow as I stared at the image. Jonathan, my husband of seven years, stood with cotton candy in hand, his head thrown back in laughter beside Elodie Mason, his assistant. Her perfectly manicured fingers rested on his arm with casual intimacy. The timestamp showed last weekend—when he'd told me he couldn't possibly step away from urgent client presentations.
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Chapter 2

Morning light filtered through our bedroom curtains as I watched Jonathan adjust his tie in the mirror, the same navy silk one I'd given him last Christmas. His movements were practiced, efficient—the routine of a man who had compartmentalized his life into neat, manageable sections.

"I want a divorce."

The words fell into the quiet room like stones into still water. Jonathan's hands paused for just a moment before continuing their work on his tie.

"What did you say?" He turned toward me, eyebrows raised in what looked like amused disbelief.

"I said I want a divorce, Jonathan." My voice remained steady, though my heart hammered against my ribs. "I'm serious."

He laughed—actually laughed—a sound that made something cold settle in my chest. "Amelia, honey, you're being dramatic. I know you're upset about last night, but—"

"This isn't about last night." I sat up in bed, pulling the covers around me like armor. "This is about seven years of coming second to everything else in your life."

"You're being emotional." He walked over and pressed a kiss to my forehead, the same patronizing gesture he might use on a child having a tantrum. "We'll talk when you're being rational."

The dismissal in his voice, the casual way he invalidated my pain—it crystallized everything wrong between us into one perfect, terrible moment.

"I am being rational," I said to his retreating form, but he was already grabbing his briefcase, already mentally at the office.

The front door closed with its usual soft click, leaving me alone with the weight of my decision.

For an hour, I sat in bed, staring at the indentation his head had left on the pillow beside me. Then I remembered the security cameras.

Jonathan had installed them six months ago after a break-in in our building. "For our safety," he'd said, though I suspected it was more about protecting his expensive electronics. The system recorded everything—the living room, kitchen, his home office.

My hands shook as I pulled up the app on my laptop. If I was going to end my marriage, I needed to understand exactly what I was ending.

The first video I found was from three weeks ago. Elodie, arriving at our apartment at 9 PM with takeout bags and that bright smile she reserved for Jonathan. I watched my husband open the door, his face lighting up in a way it hadn't for me in months.

I fast-forwarded through their dinner in his office, noting how he leaned toward her when she spoke, how she touched his arm when she laughed. The intimacy was subtle but unmistakable—the kind of connection I'd been starving for.

Another video, from last month. Jonathan in our kitchen, carefully plating pasta primavera—the same dish he'd once made for me weekly during our first year of marriage. But this wasn't for me. Elodie sat at our breakfast bar, wine glass in hand, watching him cook with the appreciation I used to show.

"You're amazing," her voice carried clearly through the recording. "Amelia is so lucky."

"Sometimes I wonder if she even notices anymore," Jonathan replied, not looking up from the stove.

The words hit me like a physical blow. He was cooking for her, confiding in her, giving her the attention and care that had once been mine alone.

Video after video revealed the same pattern. Late-night visits disguised as work sessions. Shared meals in our home while I was at my book club or visiting my friend Sarah. Conversations that grew increasingly personal, increasingly intimate.

In one particularly painful clip from two weeks ago, I watched Elodie comfort Jonathan after what appeared to be a difficult client call. Her hand rested on his shoulder as he buried his face in his hands, and she whispered something that made him look up at her with gratitude—the same look he used to give me when I helped him through his worst days.

By noon, I had seen enough. The evidence painted a clear picture: while I had been desperately trying to save our marriage, Jonathan had been building a new relationship in the ruins of our old one.

I closed the laptop and walked to our closet, pulling out the suitcases we'd used for our honeymoon. The irony wasn't lost on me.

Packing felt surprisingly liberating. I took my clothes, my books, the jewelry my grandmother had left me. I left behind the wedding photos, the anniversary gifts, the shared memories that had become monuments to something that no longer existed.

Our bedroom looked strangely empty with my belongings gone, like a hotel room after checkout. I sat at Jonathan's desk—the same one where he'd shared so many intimate moments with Elodie—and wrote a simple note on his letterhead:

*Jonathan,

I wasn't being emotional this morning. I was being honest. I'm serious about the divorce and will be staying elsewhere until you accept my decision. We both deserve better than what we've become.

Amelia*

I placed the note on his pillow, right where my head had rested that morning when I'd still been his wife in more than just name.

As I wheeled my suitcase toward the door, I didn't look back. Some chapters of our lives end not with dramatic confrontations or passionate declarations, but with quiet recognition that the story has already been over for far too long.

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