“On our wedding anniversary, my husband announced in front of all guests: “25 years is enough. I want someone younger.

“On our wedding anniversary, my husband announced in front of all guests: “25 years is enough. I want someone younger. I want you out of the apartment tomorrow!” He forgot that the apartment was mine. I took the microphone and said something that left him speechless.
My husband destroyed our marriage with a champagne glass in his hand and a smile sharp enough to cut bone. He waited until the room was silent, until our friends, neighbors, and relatives had raised their phones to record the “sweet anniversary speech.”
Then Victor looked at me and said, “Twenty-five years is enough. I want someone younger. I want you out of the apartment tomorrow.”
For three seconds, no one breathed.
The restaurant ballroom glittered around us, gold candles trembling on white tables, violins frozen mid-song. Behind Victor stood Lila, his assistant, twenty-seven, wrapped in a silver dress and victory. Her hand rested on the back of his chair like she already owned his life.
Someone laughed nervously.
Victor enjoyed that.
He lifted his glass higher. “Don’t look so shocked, everyone. Elise knows this marriage has been dead for years.”
I looked at him across the long table where our anniversary cake sat untouched. Twenty-five sugar roses. One for every year I had cooked, forgiven, stayed quiet, smiled through insults, and let him believe silence meant weakness.


My sister whispered, “Elise…”
I raised one hand gently. Not now.
Victor leaned closer to the microphone. “She’ll be fine. She has her little consulting hobby.”
Lila giggled.
A few guests looked away, embarrassed for me. Others stared with the hungry faces people wear when tragedy becomes entertainment.
Victor’s brother clapped once. “About time.”
That was when something inside me went still.
Not broken.
Still.
Victor thought he had planned a public execution. He had invited everyone who mattered to witness my shame. He had ordered the cake, chosen the room, even hired a photographer. He wanted pictures of my humiliation.
He forgot one thing.
Men like Victor rarely read documents they sign.
I folded my napkin, placed it beside my plate, and stood.
The room shifted.
Victor smiled wider. “Careful, Elise. Don’t make this uglier.”
I walked toward him slowly. My heels clicked against the marble floor. Each sound was clean, calm, final.
Lila whispered, “Is she going to cry?”
I took the microphone from Victor’s hand.
Our eyes met.
For the first time that night, his smile flickered.
I looked at the guests, then at him.
“You want me out of the apartment tomorrow?” I asked softly.
He shrugged. “Yes.”
I smiled.
“That will be difficult,” I said. “Because the apartment has never belonged to you.”…To be continued in C0mments 

👇

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *