
Parting March
Chapter 3
Christine had no chance to stop him.
“Why?” The tears she’d fought to hold back finally broke free. “Scott—why?”
“I’ll buy you a more expensive one,” Scott said.
“I don’t want expensive. I want that one.” She struggled, lunging toward the water’s edge to look for it.
Scott caught her arm, his expression hardening. “Enough. This isn’t necessary.”
He pulled her back roughly and pushed her into the car.
He had never seen her cry like this—so raw, so hysterical. Part of him expected to feel annoyed, but the ring in his pocket only pressed against him, a dull and stubborn ache.
Tears couldn’t soften a heart. Christine finally went quiet, her eyes fixed blankly on the window.
Her finger felt empty. So did her heart.
The sudden ring of a phone shattered the silence. Betty’s name flashed on the screen. Scott answered immediately, switching to speaker, his voice softening into something tender. “Hey, Betty.”
“I’m out with friends and my feet are killing me. Can you come get me?” The voice on the other end was a sugary, pleading whine.
The girl from the wheelchair.
Christine watched as he answered gently, “Sure. Send me the address. I’ll be there.”
He turned to her, his face unreadable. “I’ve got something to take care of. Go back ahead of me.”
“There’s a bus stop up ahead. Take a cab or a bus—whatever you want.”
With that, he pulled straight up to the bus stop, not even bothering to offer a decent excuse.
Staying in the car would only make her look pitiful, desperate.
Christine couldn’t help asking, “Was it because of my dad that you went out with me today?”
Scott didn’t answer. He hit the gas and sped off.
In the rearview mirror, her shoulders slumped. She leaned against a tree by the roadside, like a puppet with its strings cut.
He told himself not to soften. This was better for both of them.
Christine truly didn’t understand. Their marriage had begun for love—so how had it come to this?
Did he not have even a shred of tenderness or respect left for her?
At this hour, the buses had long stopped running. The seaside was remote; hailing a cab was nearly impossible.
She lifted her feet and began to walk. Each step felt like walking on blades, filled with nothing but resentment and pain.
It was a punishment.
Her phone rang again in the empty night, as if mocking her weakness and misery. She jabbed the screen, hanging up on the unknown number.
But the caller was relentless.
Finally, she answered. The voice that came through was sickeningly familiar, cloyingly sweet. “Miss Christine, if I were you, I’d hurry up and divorce him. Clinging to someone who doesn’t love you—doesn’t that hurt?”
She didn’t want anyone else’s commentary on her marriage.
Her fingers tightened around the phone until they turned white. She was breathing heavily.
The voice pressed on, “Scott only loves me!”
Christine ended the call with a sharp click. She tried to steady herself, taking slow, deep breaths, repeating inside that everything would be okay.
But the truth was laid bare before her.
Christine had bet her whole life on a single promise. It was a venture where she’d lost everything.
With judgment like that, no wonder the café she’d poured her heart into kept losing money year after year.
She was the world’s stupidest businesswoman.
She laughed at herself, but the laugh tore at her heart until it ached.
Under the moonlight, she kept walking. Faster and faster, until she was running down the deserted road. She wanted to run forever—away from the humiliation, away from the sorrow and loneliness.
By the time she stood before her father again, she would be the Christine who could smile.
It took three full hours of walking before Christine finally flagged down a taxi.
The driver glanced at her sweat-drenched face. “Got guts, miss, running alone this late. Boyfriend not around?”
She shook her head.
“Well, hope you find a man who treats you right,” he said with a chuckle, stopping at a red light. He pointed toward the sidewalk. “Like that happy couple over there.”
The universe, it seemed, had a cruel sense of timing.
There was Scott, carrying that girl Betty on his back, letting her pinch his ears as they laughed and played—just like any young couple in love, lost in their own world at the night market.
As she watched, her vision slowly blurred.
The driver heard a choked sound from the backseat. He checked the mirror and saw her face streaked with tears. He quickly passed her a tissue. “What’s all this crying for?”
Her voice was hoarse. “Happiness. I’m just too happy.”
And she really was.
What a shame it wasn’t hers.
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