“Maybe,” I said. “But I’d rather overreact once than underreact for the rest of my life.”
Noah handed me the new folio. I signed it, thanked him, and called for a car to the airport. Ethan followed me to the doors.
“Claire!” he shouted. “You’re throwing away a marriage over one bad night!”
I turned back one last time.
“No,” I said. “I’m ending a marriage built on a thousand bad moments I kept forgiving.”
Then I walked out into the morning heat, my suitcase rolling behind me, my heart pounding so hard it hurt. But beneath the pain was something else—something clean and unfamiliar.
Relief.
I don’t know if Ethan ever told people the truth about what happened at that hotel. I don’t know whether his family still calls it a misunderstanding. What I do know is this: the moment I stopped begging for basic respect, my life became bigger, quieter, and better.
So tell me—have you ever had a moment where one final insult made everything suddenly clear? Because sometimes the “crazy” decision is the one that saves you.
