
My Last Twelve Hours as His Wife
Chapter 4
"I hope you won't regret this!" Evan was furious. He picked up his fountain pen and aggressively scrawled his name across the document. "We can get divorced, but you won't get a single dime of my family's money."
I carefully tucked the signed agreement into my bag. I didn't feel sad at all. If anything, it felt as though a crushing weight I had carried for years had finally been lifted from my chest.
I had fallen in love with Evan at first sight. Granted, I had been well aware of his reputation as a womanizer in Vaeloria, so it never crossed my mind that he would actually honor the agreement between our families and marry me. Plus, among his long list of stunning ex-girlfriends, I was literally just an ugly duckling.
Hence, when he'd actually dropped to one knee and proposed to me, it caught me completely off guard. I had been both overjoyed and deeply moved. At the time, I had naively believed that since Evan had asked for my hand in marriage, he must like me at least a little bit.
The consequence of my wishful thinking came on the third day after our wedding, when the media caught him checking into a hotel with a wealthy heiress. I had been consumed by jealousy and rage, yet I'd refused to let go.
I had genuinely believed that my unconditional, wholehearted love would eventually change him. Instead, it just led to me losing my mind and spiraling out of control time and time again. I went from being a genius prodigy whom everyone looked up to to a miserable, resentful trophy wife.
Truth be told, if I could've turned a blind eye to my husband's infidelity the way many wealthy wives did, my life really would have been incredibly comfortable. After all, for the five years we were married, aside from his philandering, Evan had been extremely generous to my family and me.
On our anniversaries and Valentine's Day, even though he wasn't physically there, Charles would always deliver fresh flowers and expensive jewelry to me right on time. When I ran a fever and fell ill, Evan would be out networking all night, but he'd hire an entire medical team to take care of me.
Consequently, to the rest of the world, including Mom, I was simply a woman who didn't know how good she had it.
However, day after day, after facing that massive, deserted mansion and the odd looks from my colleagues and friends, I honestly felt as though I was suffocating. I realized it was finally time to let go.
With that thought in mind, I looked up and met Evan's eyes. My gaze was completely clear and calm. There wasn't a trace of affection in my eyes. "Don't worry, I don't want a single cent of your money."
I had already decided to join the research team and relocate to Ymira indefinitely. So, no matter how much money I had, it would be utterly useless to me.
"You two were heading out for lunch, right? I won't keep you." Having said my piece, I walked around Evan and headed straight for the exit.
I came to a halt at the threshold. "Since you said the food I made tastes awful, I suppose there's no need for me to pass my recipes along to Maria anymore, right?"
Evan sneered at me. "Don't be so full of yourself! Do you honestly think I'll starve just because you're gone?"
Fair enough. I shouldn't have bothered asking.
"Enjoy your meal." With that, I left without a backward glance.
…
I went back to the Beckett residence to pack right after dropping the divorce papers off at my lawyer's. Five years of marriage, five years of unrequited devotion and bottled-up resentment—I was resetting it all to zero today.
More than half of the closet space belonged to Evan. My own clothes were few and far between, much like my insignificant presence in this marriage. I worked quickly, stuffing what little I owned into a suitcase.
Just then, hurried footsteps suddenly echoed from the entryway. It was Evan, the man who was supposed to be having lunch with Astrid right now.
His profound gaze locked onto mine, burning with a furious rage I had never seen before. "You had a miscarriage?"
I stiffened. When I recalled the unborn child I had lost before it had even fully formed, a sharp pain twisted in my chest. "Yes, a year ago. At the time—"