Wrong Number: My Sweetest Goodbye

Wrong Number: My Sweetest Goodbye

I. HAWKINS

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My eight-year marriage ended over a photo of my husband, Drake, with his young associate, Kandace. He called her his #WorkWife. That same night, he accidentally scalded my arm with boiling soup. Instead of taking me to the hospital, he left me stranded on the side of the road to comfort Kandace over a headache. His cruelty brought back a buried memory: the night his negligence caused me to miscarry our child, a loss he twisted to blame entirely on me. The final blow came when I saw it-a matching tattoo on Kandace' s wrist, the same one Drake had over his heart. This wasn't just an affair; I was being replaced. He begged, cried, and even carved the tattoo from his own chest in a bloody display of desperation. He swore he loved me and couldn't live without me. So when the hospital called to say he was in a critical car accident, fighting for his life, I listened calmly. "I'm sorry," I said, my voice perfectly clear. "You have the wrong number."

Chapter 1

My eight-year marriage ended over a photo of my husband, Drake, with his young associate, Kandace. He called her his #WorkWife.

That same night, he accidentally scalded my arm with boiling soup. Instead of taking me to the hospital, he left me stranded on the side of the road to comfort Kandace over a headache.

His cruelty brought back a buried memory: the night his negligence caused me to miscarry our child, a loss he twisted to blame entirely on me.

The final blow came when I saw it-a matching tattoo on Kandace' s wrist, the same one Drake had over his heart. This wasn't just an affair; I was being replaced.

He begged, cried, and even carved the tattoo from his own chest in a bloody display of desperation. He swore he loved me and couldn't live without me.

So when the hospital called to say he was in a critical car accident, fighting for his life, I listened calmly.

"I'm sorry," I said, my voice perfectly clear. "You have the wrong number."

Chapter 1

Eliza POV:

My eight-year marriage ended with a single tap on a glass screen.

The photo appeared without warning, wedged between a picture of my best friend Jolene' s cat and an ad for sustainable furniture. It was Drake, my husband, his arm slung casually around his young associate, Kandace Hill. They were in his gleaming corner office, the one I' d helped him design, the one with the panoramic view of the city that was supposed to be our view.

They were smiling. Not corporate, polite smiles, but genuine, crinkle-at-the-eyes smiles. Kandace' s head was tilted just so, leaning into his shoulder as if it were the most natural thing in the world. Drake' s hand rested comfortably on her waist, his thumb stroking the fabric of her blouse.

The caption was the final twist of the knife.

"Couldn' t get through these late nights without my amazing #WorkWife! @KandaceHill"

For a full minute, I just stared. My heart didn' t pound. My stomach didn' t drop. There was no hot rush of anger or icy wave of dread. There was only a profound, hollow stillness.

The old Eliza would have thrown her phone across the room. She would have shattered the screen, the sound of splintering glass a pale imitation of the chaos in her heart. She would have called him, screaming, crying, demanding an explanation he would never properly give.

But the old Eliza was gone. She had died slowly, piece by piece, over eight long years of broken promises and casual cruelties. This photo was not a murder weapon; it was just the confirmation of death.

My thumb moved with a life of its own, hovering over the little heart icon. I double-tapped. The heart filled in, a small, blood-red confirmation of my acknowledgment.

My phone screen refreshed a moment later. The post was gone. Vanished, as if it had never existed. But the digital ghost of it lingered, seared onto the back of my eyelids. He had posted it, seen my 'like,' and deleted it. A test. A taunt.

Seconds later, my phone buzzed with an incoming video call. Drake' s face filled the screen, handsome and furious. In the background, I could see the blurred figures of his team. Kandace was one of them, her face blotchy, her eyes red as if she' d been crying.

"What the hell was that, Eliza?" he boomed, his voice too loud for the phone' s small speaker. He wasn' t asking, he was accusing.

I kept my own voice level, a flat, calm plain. "What was what, Drake?"

"The 'like.' Don' t play dumb with me. You know exactly what I' m talking about. Kandace is mortified. My whole team saw it. Now everyone is whispering."

He berated me, a tech CEO dressing down a clumsy intern, not a husband speaking to his wife.

"It was a joke, Eliza. A joke. Do you not have a sense of humor anymore? God, you' re so uptight."

I watched him, this man whose every mood I once charted like the weather, and felt nothing. The insults, disguised as jokes, had been his weapon of choice for years. They used to leave me raw, questioning my own sanity. Now, they were just noise.

"You' re making a scene over nothing. Don' t be so stupid," he said, his voice dropping to a hiss.

Stupid. That was his favorite. He used it whenever I failed to anticipate his needs, whenever I had an opinion that differed from his, whenever I was inconveniently human.

I didn' t argue. I didn' t defend myself. I didn' t cry.

I simply said, "Okay," and watched the confusion flicker in his eyes.

He expected a fight. He craved the drama, the tears, the passionate, messy reconciliation that would follow, reaffirming his irresistible power over me. My indifference was a language he didn' t speak. It was a lock he didn' t have the key for.

He hung up. I lowered the phone, the screen dark, and for the first time in a long time, I felt a sliver of peace. The war was over. Not because I had won, but because I had finally put down my weapons and walked off the battlefield.

He thought my 'like' on that photo was an act of war. He was wrong.

It was a signature on a death certificate.

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