Stories: I want a divorce

The first time I met Miranda, she didn’t even pretend to be polite.

She stood in my kitchen like she owned it, her lipstick too bright, her smile too sharp. My husband—my husband—hovered behind her, avoiding my eyes.

Miranda’s gaze swept over me from head to toe. “Well, darling,” she said, voice dripping with sugar, “you weren’t exaggerating. She really let herself go. Such a shame—decent bone structure, though.”

For a second, I couldn’t speak. Then I managed, “Excuse me?”

My husband cleared his throat like he was announcing dessert. “Lauren, I want a divorce.”

The word hit harder than any insult. “A divorce? What about our four kids? What about our life?”

He shrugged, calm and careless. “You’ll manage. I’ll send money. Oh, and you can sleep on the couch or go to your sister’s. Miranda’s staying over.”

That was the moment I realized he wasn’t asking. He was evicting me from my own marriage.

So I didn’t beg.

That night, while they drank wine in the living room, I packed quietly. I folded tiny pajamas, tucked stuffed animals into bags, and kissed four sleepy foreheads. I didn’t even slam the door when I left. I just drove to my sister’s house with shaking hands and my heart splintering in my chest.

The divorce was ugly, but I stayed focused: custody schedule, support, stability. I found a small apartment with sunlight in the kitchen and a thrifted table big enough for homework and pancakes. I got a better job. I started running again—at first to burn off anger, then because breathing hard reminded me I was still alive.

Two years later, on a gray afternoon, I was walking home with groceries when I saw them.

Miranda and my ex-husband stood outside a café across the street.

At first, I barely recognized him.

His suit was wrinkled, his hairline thinner. His shoulders looked permanently slumped, like life had finally gotten heavy. Miranda, once flawless, was red-eyed and furious, waving her phone in his face while he pleaded with both palms raised.

“You said you’d handle it!” she snapped loud enough that people turned. “You said there was money!”

“I did handle it,” he hissed back, voice cracking. “Until the court started garnishing my wages because I was behind! Do you think I wanted this?”

Miranda laughed, sharp and bitter. “You can’t even keep up with payments for your own kids. And you promised me a new car.”

That’s when he saw me.

His face changed—hope, shame, panic—all battling at once. “Lauren,” he said, stepping forward. “Wait—”

I didn’t.

I adjusted the grocery bags and kept walking, calm as a clear sky after a storm.

Behind me, Miranda’s voice rose again. “Don’t you walk away from me!”

But I already had.

When I got home, my kids were sprawled on the rug, arguing about a cartoon. My oldest looked up and grinned. “Mom! You got the cereal we like!”

I smiled, setting the bags down.

Because karma wasn’t them fighting in public.

Karma was me realizing I didn’t lose a husband that day—I lost a burden.

And I gained my life back.

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