Too Late, Husband: Watch Me Shine

Eloise POV:

Dawson stood there, utterly speechless, his mouth opening and closing without a sound. Every accusation I threw at him, every harsh truth, landed with brutal accuracy, leaving him no room to argue, no defense to mount. His face was a mask of shock and dawning comprehension, the arrogant CEO stripped bare, revealing a scared, lost man.

A bitter, tearless laugh escaped me. "You know it's true, don't you, Dawson?" I said, my voice thick with a strange mixture of sorrow and triumph. "You know exactly what you did."

I took a deep breath, adjusted the handle of my suitcase, and walked past him. I didn't bump him, didn't touch him. I simply navigated around his stunned figure, heading for the front door, the one he had so casually walked out of just hours ago.

"Eloise!" he cried, his voice breaking, desperate, echoing through the empty hall. "Eloise, wait! Our twenty years! Our life! What about our future?"

I stopped, my hand on the doorknob. I didn't turn around. My gaze was fixed on the intricate carving of the door, a detail I had once loved, now just an indifferent object. "There is no future, Dawson," I said, my voice flat, final. "Not for us."

I turned, finally, to look at him. His eyes were wide, pleading, but I saw no remorse, only fear. "You gave away our money. You brought your mistress into our home. You weaponized our trauma. And you let me walk into a hospital alone, to end a life that should have been ours. There's no coming back from that. Our marriage is over. It died a long time ago, I just wasn't brave enough to admit it."

I looked down at the suitcase in my hand. "Consider that $250,000 your belated payment for my wasted youth. My lawyer will handle the rest of the divorce proceedings. You'll receive the papers soon."

My fingers closed around the cold metal of the doorknob. I twisted it, and the door swung inward slightly, letting in a gust of cold evening air. It felt bracing, cleansing. A strange sense of lightness, a fragile seed of relief, began to bloom in the barren landscape of my heart.

I took one last look around the house, at the silent, accusing furniture, the echoes of a life that was now irrevocably gone. Then my eyes landed on Dawson, still frozen in the doorway, his face ashen, his jaw slack. Campbell was nowhere to be seen, likely cowering behind a corner, listening.

"And Dawson?" I said, my voice cutting through the silence, sharp and clear. "May you and your mistress be bound together forever. You deserve each other."

With that, I stepped across the threshold, into the liberating chill of the evening air. I didn't hesitate. I didn't look back. The door swung shut behind me with a soft click, severing the last thread that connected me to that life, to that man.

As I walked down the path, my phone buzzed in my hand. It was Dawson. I didn't even glance at the screen. My thumb moved swiftly, blocking his number. A moment later, another buzz. Sarah. Then Mark. I blocked them all. I didn't need their well-meaning but ultimately useless attempts at mediation. This was my battle, and I had fought it alone.

I pulled out my phone again and opened our family group chat. My fingers paused for a moment over the keyboard, then typed. "Dawson and I are divorcing. I will not be discussing the details, nor will I be accepting any attempts at mediation. This is final." I hit send. The notifications would explode, but I wouldn't be there to see them.

A yellow taxi, thankfully empty, pulled up to the curb. I hailed it, heaved my suitcase into the trunk, and slid into the back seat. As the car pulled away, the familiar streets of our neighborhood blurred into a smear of lights and shadows. The past eighteen years, the years I had poured into Dawson, into us, felt like a bad dream from which I was finally waking. They were gone, like dust motes carried on the wind.

The world was vast, unknown, and exhilaratingly empty. From now on, Dawson Bowman and I were strangers. Our paths would diverge, mountain high and river long, never to meet again.

I rented a small, airy apartment on the other side of the city. It was nothing like our sprawling house, nothing like the grand designs I used to sketch. Just a cozy space with a tiny balcony overlooking a quiet park. I decorated it simply, with clean lines and soft colors, filling it with plants and books. The air smelled of fresh paint and possibility, of sunlight and laundry detergent. And for the first time in what felt like forever, everything felt right.

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