For the longest time, I clung to hope. Pretended everything was normal — same mornings, same routines, same familiar face at the breakfast table. I told myself the late nights were just work, the unfamiliar perfume just someone else’s, the whispers in the hallway just stress.
But deep down, I knew.
When I finally asked Sergey, my husband, if there was someone else, he didn’t flinch. He simply said:
“Yeah. You already know. I think we should divorce.”
Just like that. No warmth, no regret. Just… over.
The people around me tried to soften the fall.
“You’ll move on,” my best friend Marina said. “It’s a blessing in disguise.”
“He didn’t deserve you,” my mother snapped. “Let him go.”
“Life doesn’t end here,” even my mother-in-law told me. “No kids, you’re young — start fresh.”
But none of it felt real. Not yet. Somewhere in my heart, I still hoped he’d come to his senses. I called, hoping to hear a change of tone. A sign. But he never even picked up.
Instead, I leaned into distractions. Marina invited me out more often. And her brother, Kirill — someone I’d known for years — became a quiet presence in my life. We talked, walked, sat in silence sometimes. He didn’t try to fix me. Just listened. Just existed with me. And somewhere along the way, I began to feel steady again.
By the time the divorce was finalized, I had stopped looking backward. When Kirill gently took my hand one evening, I didn’t flinch. I smiled.
Marina was overjoyed.
“I always knew you two were meant to find each other,” she grinned. “Took you both long enough!”
And she was right. For the first time in years, I felt like I was being seen, cherished, supported.
Then, out of nowhere, Sergey called.
I stared at the screen, unsure if I should even pick up. But I did.
“I need to meet,” he said. “Urgently. In the park by your place.”
Curious — and a little amused — I agreed.
When he showed up, he didn’t waste time.
“I want my wedding ring back,” he said flatly. “I’m getting married. We’re reusing the rings.”
It took me a second. Then I laughed.
I laughed like I hadn’t in months. Not out of joy — but from the sheer audacity.
“You want me to give you the ring… so you can use it with someone else?” I asked, wiping tears from my eyes.
He looked slightly uncomfortable. “Well, I paid for it.”
I reached into my pocket.
“You’re lucky I didn’t toss it out already,” I said.
And then, with a calm I hadn’t known I possessed, I threw it into the lake.
“No refunds,” I said, turning to walk away.
I didn’t wait for his reaction. I didn’t need to.
When I told Kirill later, he burst out laughing.
“Good,” he said. “That ring had no place in your new life anyway.”
We’re not planning a wedding yet. But sometimes I catch him looking at me — like he’s already imagining it. And honestly? Maybe it’s not so far off.
We’ve both been through storms. Now, we’re just grateful for the quiet. The laughter. The chance to build something honest.
I’m not broken. I’m just beginning again.