
Wrong Number: My Sweetest Goodbye
My eight-year marriage ended over a photo of my husband, Drake, with his young associate, Kandace. He called her his #WorkWife.
That same night, he accidentally scalded my arm with boiling soup. Instead of taking me to the hospital, he left me stranded on the side of the road to comfort Kandace over a headache.
His cruelty brought back a buried memory: the night his negligence caused me to miscarry our child, a loss he twisted to blame entirely on me.
The final blow came when I saw it-a matching tattoo on Kandace' s wrist, the same one Drake had over his heart. This wasn't just an affair; I was being replaced.
He begged, cried, and even carved the tattoo from his own chest in a bloody display of desperation. He swore he loved me and couldn't live without me.
So when the hospital called to say he was in a critical car accident, fighting for his life, I listened calmly.
"I'm sorry," I said, my voice perfectly clear. "You have the wrong number."
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Chapter 7
Eliza POV:
The silence in the room was absolute. It was so quiet I could hear the hum of the refrigerator, the distant wail of a siren in the city below. Drake stared at me, his angry smirk frozen on his face.
"What did you just say?" he asked, his voice barely a whisper. He looked like he was the one who had been slapped.
"I said okay," I repeated, my voice steady. "Let' s get a divorce." I walked over to the bookshelf where I kept my files. "I already have the papers drawn up."
His face went from shocked to furious in a split second. "You think you can play games with me?" he roared. "You think this is some kind of tactic? A little reverse psychology to get my attention?"
He laughed, but it was a brittle, desperate sound. "Fine. You want to play? Let' s play." He grabbed his keys and stormed out of the apartment, slamming the door so hard a picture frame rattled on the wall.
He didn' t come home that night, or the next. I knew his routine. He was trying to punish me, to make me panic and come crawling back, begging for forgiveness.
On the third day, Mark called me. "Eliza, Drake' s at a bar downtown. He' s completely wasted. Can you come get him?"
"No," I said calmly. "You can get him, Mark. Or you can call Kandace. I' m sure she' d be happy to." I hung up.
He came home the next day, sullen and hungover. He sat on the couch next to me while I watched TV, radiating a cold fury. He stayed home every night that week, a silent, brooding presence in the apartment. His way of showing me he could be a good husband, if he chose to be.
Then the flowers started. A massive bouquet of roses delivered to my office every single day for a week. The old Eliza would have posted a picture on Instagram with a gushing caption, broadcasting to the world that her husband loved her. Drake kept checking his phone, refreshing his feed, waiting for the public validation that never came.
It was as if the word "divorce" had never been spoken. He was trying to erase it, to pretend it was just another one of my hysterical outbursts. Jolene had advised me to wait, to let him show his true colors. So I waited.
A week later, Julian, my old college friend from the brewery, invited me out for his birthday. I was chatting with him at the bar when a hand clamped down on my shoulder. It was Drake.
"There you are," he said, a wide, triumphant smile on his face. "I' ve been looking for you."
He dragged me into a private karaoke room where his friends and Kandace were gathered. Kandace shot me a look of pure venom.
"Eliza, I was just telling everyone how you' re too shy for karaoke," she said, her voice dripping with faux concern. "Drake told me you hate being the center of attention."
My eyes landed on the jacket she was wearing. It was a limited edition designer piece, one Drake had given me for our fifth anniversary. He' d told me a month ago he' d lost it at the dry cleaner' s. When I' d pressed him about it, he' d exploded, calling me materialistic and ungrateful.
Drake pulled me towards his friends, his arm tight around my waist. "My wife, everyone," he announced proudly. They all chuckled and made jokes about him being whipped. He beamed, soaking in the performance of being a devoted husband.
Someone shoved a microphone into my hand. "Come on, Drake, sing a duet with your lovely wife!"
Kandace stepped forward, draping my lost anniversary jacket over my shoulders. "You look a little cold, Eliza. Here."
Drake' s hand on my waist tightened. "It' s Kandace' s," he whispered frantically in my ear. "She bought it herself. It' s just a coincidence."
I ignored him, my eyes on my phone as I replied to a text from Julian.
"It' s just a jacket," I said, my voice loud enough for everyone to hear. I took it off and handed it to Kandace. "It suits you. You can have it."
I then handed her the microphone. "I have to go. You sing with him."
Kandace grabbed my arm as I turned to leave. "Wait, Eliza. You' re misunderstanding." Her eyes were wide and pleading, a perfect imitation of innocence. As she moved, her sleeve rode up, revealing a small, intricate tattoo on her wrist. A stylized wave, breaking over a crescent moon.
I froze.
Drake had the exact same tattoo on his chest, right over his heart.
My gaze lifted from her wrist to his face. His eyes were wide with panic. He knew I' d seen it. He knew I understood.
I took a step back. Then, with a slow, deliberate movement, I took his hand. I took Kandace' s hand. I placed them together, one on top of the other, like a priest joining a couple in matrimony.
I smiled, a wide, genuine smile.
"Congratulations," I said, my voice ringing with a sincerity that chilled the room. "You two make a perfect couple. I wish you all the best."
I turned and walked out of the room, leaving a stunned silence in my wake.
Drake scrambled after me, catching me by the elevator. His face was pale, his hands shaking. "Eliza, no, it' s not what you think. The tattoo was just a stupid dare. It means nothing. I' ll have it removed, I swear."
He was begging now, his voice cracking. People in the hallway were starting to stare.
"I believe you, Drake," I said, my voice soft. And I did. I believed that he would do anything, say anything, to keep his perfect life intact.
"We can talk about this at home," I said, patting his arm. "After your party is over."
It was the same dismissive line he had used on me a hundred times. The look of shock and hurt in his eyes was almost satisfying.
I stepped into the elevator and pressed the button for the ground floor. The doors slid shut, and I didn' t look back.
My phone buzzed relentlessly. Texts from him.
"Are you home?"
"I' m waiting for you."
"Don' t drink. I bought you that stomach medicine you like."
Then a call. I answered. His voice was soft, pleading. "Let me come get you."
"No need," I said brightly. "Julian is giving me a ride."
"You' re kidding, right?" he spat, his jealousy flaring.
I switched the phone to speaker. "Julian, can you say hi to my husband?"
Julian' s calm, deep voice filled the car. "Hello, Drake."
I heard a sharp intake of breath on the other end of the line, then a string of choked, furious curses.
I hung up. And for the first time in eight years, I didn' t go home. I went to Jolene' s.
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