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But the Call From Their Lawyer the Next Day Shattered Her Completely

 

After half a century together, I finally filed for divorce. I was 75 years old and exhausted from a lifetime of compromise that never seemed to end. Charles and I had grown distant long ago. The kids were grown, the house was quiet, and the air between us felt suffocating. I needed freedom — real freedom — before my life ran out. And despite the shock on Charles’s face, despite his pleading, despite the guilt gnawing at me… I went through with it.

When we signed the final papers, the lawyer suggested we all step into a café across the street — a strange kind of “farewell,” but civil enough. I agreed. Charles and I had ended things amicably, after all. Or so I thought. The moment we sat down, he slipped back into his old habits. He ordered for me. Told the waiter what I would eat. Decided — yet again — that I didn’t need to speak for myself. Something inside me broke loose.

“THIS IS EXACTLY WHY I NEVER WANT TO BE WITH YOU!” I shouted, loud enough that the whole café turned to stare. Then I walked out, trembling but free. That night, he called me over and over. I ignored every call. I told myself it was my time now. My life. My peace.

The next morning, my phone rang again. I almost didn’t answer — until I saw the caller ID.

It wasn’t Charles.
It was our lawyer.

I sighed, ready to snap. “If Charles asked you to call me, then DON’T BOTHER.”

The lawyer’s voice softened instantly. “He didn’t. This… this is about him. Sit down, please.”

My chest tightened. “What do you mean?”

There was a pause. A long one.

Then, gently, he said the words that knocked the breath from my lungs:

“Your ex is gone.”

In an instant, every ounce of anger I had clung to evaporated. The man I spent fifty years with — the man I had just walked away from — was suddenly not there anymore. The silence in my house felt different now. Colder. Final.

And all I could think was:
Our last words to each other were shouted across a café.