
Ferris Wheel Farewell
Chapter 3
The hotel room door closed behind me with a soft click that felt like the final period on a sentence I'd been writing for seven years. I sat on the edge of the unfamiliar bed, my suitcase still packed beside me, and finally allowed myself to breathe. The Grand Plaza Hotel wasn't fancy, but it was clean, anonymous, and—most importantly—not home.
My phone buzzed again—the fourteenth call from Jonathan in the three hours since he must have found my note. I watched his name flash across the screen until it went dark, then immediately lit up again. This time, I switched it to silent and placed it face-down on the nightstand.
I wasn't ready to hear his voice. Not yet. Not when the images of him and Elodie were still so fresh in my mind.
The voicemails started piling up almost immediately. At first, I refused to listen, but by evening, curiosity got the better of me.
"Amelia, this is ridiculous. Come home immediately so we can discuss this like adults." His first message was cold, controlled—the voice he used when addressing subordinates who'd disappointed him.
By the fifth message, the facade had cracked. "Baby, please. Whatever you think is happening with Elodie isn't real. You're overreacting. Just come home."
The tenth message came around midnight, his voice slurred slightly. "I'll change, okay? We can go to counseling. I'll take you to that stupid amusement park. Just... please come home."
I deleted them all and checked out of the hotel before dawn, moving to another across town. The next night, I switched again. Something about Jonathan's desperation felt suffocating, like he might materialize in my room if I stayed in one place too long.
By the third day, I'd settled into a strange rhythm—work remotely during the day, change hotels at night, ignore the increasingly frantic messages from my husband. Sarah offered her spare room, but I declined. I needed neutral territory to think clearly.
That evening, as I walked back to the Grand Plaza—I'd circled back, assuming Jonathan wouldn't expect me to return to a previous hotel—something made me pause. Across the street, mounted on a lamppost that hadn't had one before, was a security camera angled precisely toward the hotel entrance.
A chill ran through me that had nothing to do with the evening breeze. Jonathan had always been thorough, especially when pursuing something he wanted. The camera could be coincidence, but my instincts screamed otherwise.
I hurried inside, keeping my head down and sunglasses on despite the dimming light. At the reception desk, I requested a room facing the back of the building, away from the street.
"Of course, Ms. Simpson," the receptionist said, typing away. "Your usual preferences?"
I froze. I'd been using my maiden name and paying cash. How did she—
"I'm sorry," I said carefully. "Have I stayed here before?"
She looked confused. "No, but your husband called earlier to confirm your reservation. He was very specific about your room preferences—said you'd be arriving tonight."
My blood ran cold. I hadn't made a reservation. Jonathan was tracking me somehow—my phone, my credit cards, something.
"I've changed my mind," I said, backing away from the desk. "Thank you."
I rushed to the ladies' room, heart pounding. I needed to think. My phone—it had to be my phone. I powered it off completely and removed the battery, thankful for my older model that still allowed such things.
Just as I was considering my next move, a commotion erupted in the lobby. Through the bathroom door, I heard a familiar voice growing increasingly agitated.
"I know my wife is here. Amelia Warren. I need her room number now."
Jonathan's voice carried that dangerous edge I'd heard only a few times in our marriage—when a major client threatened to leave, when his position at the firm was questioned.
"Sir, we cannot disclose guest information," the receptionist responded, her professional tone strained.
"She's my wife!" His voice rose, drawing attention. "This is an emergency!"
I cracked the door open just enough to see him—disheveled, unshaven, his usually immaculate suit wrinkled as if he'd been sleeping in it. This wasn't the polished, controlled man I'd married. This was someone desperate, unhinged.
"Sir, I'm going to have to ask you to lower your voice," a security guard approached, his stance non-threatening but firm.
"You don't understand," Jonathan's voice cracked. "I need to find her. I need to explain."
I closed the door silently, leaning against it as I heard security escort him out, his protests fading. Through the small window, I watched him standing on the sidewalk below, staring up at the hotel as if he could will me to appear.
For a moment, I almost felt sorry for him. Then I remembered Elodie's hand on his arm, his laughter in the amusement park photos, and the coldness in his eyes when I'd asked for divorce.
I slipped out the side entrance, disappearing into the night before he could spot me. Whatever game Jonathan was playing—tracking me, installing cameras, creating scenes—I wasn't ready to face him. Not until I knew exactly what I wanted to say when I finally did.
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