I studied him carefully. The man I had been married to for four years. The same man who once cried in a hospital waiting room when my father died. The same man now standing in our kitchen with coffee still burning my skin, demanding I hand over my money and my late mother’s jewelry to his sister as if I were some storage unit with a heartbeat.

Inside me, something went utterly quiet.

Without another word, I walked upstairs. Ryan shouted after me, likely expecting tears, pleas, another argument. Instead, I photographed my face in the bathroom mirror, called urgent care, and then phoned my friend Tasha. After that I contacted a moving company that offered same-day service—and a locksmith.

By noon, every drawer that belonged to me was empty.

By two, my clothes, paperwork, keepsakes, and work equipment were boxed.

And at three-fifteen, when Ryan drove into the driveway with Nicole in the passenger seat, he stepped through the front door and froze.

The house echoed with emptiness.

A uniformed police officer stood in the living room beside the final stack of my boxes. On the dining table, beneath my wedding ring, rested a copy of the police report.