I didn’t understand. I was exhausted, heavily pregnant, and desperate to fix whatever had snapped inside him.
So I turned to Anna.
“I don’t know what’s happening,” I sobbed into the phone at midnight, curled up in the dark while Michael lay next to me, silent. “It’s like he’s already gone.”
“Hel, you’re overthinking,” she murmured. “He loves you. It’s just stress.”
I wanted to believe her.
But the weight of it all—the sleepless nights, the gnawing anxiety, the aching loneliness despite being married—wore me down.
Then one morning, I woke up with a dull pain in my stomach. By evening, I was in the hospital, staring at a doctor’s lips moving, but not really hearing the words.
No heartbeat.
No baby.
Grief is supposed to come in waves. Mine felt like an avalanche.
But Michael? He was already gone.
He sat beside me in the hospital, cold and silent, his hands never reaching for mine. No whispered reassurances. No grief-stricken apologies. Just a man who looked like he was waiting for a bus, not mourning the child we had lost.
A month later, he finally said the words I think he had been rehearsing for weeks.
“I’m not happy anymore, Helena.”
That was it. No explanation, no emotion. Just a hollow excuse.
The day Michael left wasn’t an argument, wasn’t an explosive fight with tears and screaming. It was colder than that.
I blinked at him across the kitchen table, my breath caught in my chest.
“What?” My voice cracked.
He sighed, rubbing his temples like I was the problem. “I just… I don’t feel the same. It’s been this way for a while.”
A while.
I swallowed hard. “Since the baby?”
His jaw tightened. “It’s not about that.”
The lie was almost laughable.
I waited for something—remorse, guilt, anything. But he just sat there, avoiding my eyes.
“So, that’s it? Five years, and you’re just… done?”
He exhaled, sounding almost bored. “I don’t want to fight, Helena.”
I let out a shaky laugh, the kind that comes when you’re on the verge of breaking. “Oh, you don’t want to fight? That’s funny, because I don’t remember getting a say in any of this.”
He stood up, grabbed his keys, and walked out the door.
And Anna? She followed soon after.
At first, she was my rock, my lifeline through it all. But one day, she stopped answering my calls. My messages went unread. Then, suddenly—blocked. On everything.
I didn’t understand. Until I did.
It was my mother who found out first. She called me one evening, her voice hesitant.
“Helena, sweetheart… I need you to check something.”
She sent me a link to Anna’s Instagram.
And there they were.
Michael and Anna. Laughing on a sunlit beach, arms wrapped around each other like they had been in love for years. His lips pressed against her temple, her head tilted back in laughter.
I scrolled down, my hands trembling. Picture after picture, spanning weeks. Dinners at expensive restaurants, trips to ski resorts, candlelit evenings by the fire. She had been posting them freely, openly—while I was still legally married to him.
The betrayal burned through me like acid. But if they thought I was going to collapse and fade away, they were sorely mistaken.
I took my pain and turned it into power. Michael was sloppy, too caught up in his fantasy to cover his tracks. The evidence of his affair was undeniable, legal ammunition in our divorce. In the end, I walked away with the house, half of his money, and the satisfaction of knowing he had to start over from scratch.
He took my trust. I took what I was owed.
Starting over wasn’t easy. There were nights I lay awake, wondering if I would ever feel whole again. If I would ever love again.
But life has a way of rewarding resilience.
A year later, I met Daniel.
He wasn’t just different from Michael—he was everything Michael wasn’t. Kind. Attentive. When I told him about my past, about my miscarriage, about Michael and Anna’s betrayal, he just pulled me into his arms and whispered, “You deserved so much better.”
And for the first time in a long time, I believed it.
We built a life together. A real one. And soon after, we welcomed a baby—a beautiful little girl with my eyes and his smile. I finally had the happiness that had been stolen from me.
Then, one night, fate handed me the sweetest kind of closure.
I was rushing home from work, eager to see my husband and daughter, when I stopped at a gas station. The place was nearly empty, the flickering neon lights buzzing softly in the quiet night.
And that’s when I saw them.
Michael and Anna.
But gone were the designer clothes, the picture-perfect vacations, the effortless bliss. Their car was an absolute wreck—rusted, dented, barely clinging to life. The sound of a baby’s cries pierced the air as Anna shifted the tiny bundle in her arms, her face twisted in frustration.
Michael stood at the counter, swiping his card. Once. Twice.
Declined.
He groaned, running a hand through his unkempt hair. “Just try it again,” he snapped at the cashier.
“Sir, I’ve tried it three times.”
Anna stormed up to him, hissing under her breath. “Are you serious? We don’t even have gas money?”
“I told you things are tight,” Michael muttered.
“Oh, I’m the problem?” she shot back, bouncing the screaming baby. “Maybe if you kept a damn job instead of flirting with cashiers—”
“That’s not what I was doing,” he gritted out.
Anna let out a bitter laugh. “Sure. Just like you weren’t cheating on Helena, right?”
I bit back a grin. Karma is a beautiful thing.
Michael let out a frustrated groan as the gas station clerk handed his useless card back.
Anna turned to him, her eyes blazing. “You want to know the truth, Michael?”
He crossed his arms. “Oh, this should be good.”
She let out a humorless chuckle. “I think Helena got the better end of the deal.”
And with that, I put my car in drive and went home to my real happiness.