The night after the island cancellation, I did not sleep. Instead, I sat by the floor-to-ceiling window of my office, watching the city lights flicker like distant secrets I no longer belonged to. For the first time in years, silence felt like control rather than loneliness.
Caleb called twice. Then ten times. I watched the screen light up and fade without answering. Each attempt felt less like urgency and more like panic catching up to someone who had always assumed consequences were optional.
My attorney sent the final asset breakdown at dawn. Every transfer had been traced, every forged document confirmed. The private investigator added one last detail: Tessa had already begun cooperating with authorities to reduce her own liability.
By noon, Margot’s lawyers were requesting “private resolution meetings.” I declined. Some conversations only exist to soften accountability, and I was no longer interested in softening anything.
That evening, I returned to the island alone as originally planned. The same villa stood waiting, but this time no one interrupted the peace. No demands, no expectations, no voices deciding what I was supposed to be.
I stood at the shoreline as the tide moved in and realized something simple but permanent: I had not destroyed my marriage. I had finally stopped paying for it.