Just two days earlier, her fiancé, Mark, had disappeared from her life. There hadn’t been shouting or a dramatic argument that anyone could hear. No explanation shared with the neighbors. Just a quiet exit.
He left a short note behind. Took his clothes. Cleared out his side of the bathroom. Emptied their shared account. By the time Sarah realized what had happened, half of her world had vanished.
Behind me, at the dining table, my husband Tom sat scrolling through his phone. He barely noticed what I was looking at until I let out a small gasp.
He glanced toward the window, took in the scene for half a second, then scoffed.
“Oh, come on,” he muttered. “Some people just thrive on drama. She needs to get herself together.”
The words hit me harder than I expected.
Tom had always described himself as realistic, practical, unemotional. He believed feelings were something you managed quietly, not something you let spill into the world. For years, I’d accepted that as part of who he was. But in that moment, standing there watching a pregnant woman crumble under the weight of abandonment, his attitude felt less like practicality and more like a complete lack of compassion.
“That’s enough,” I said quietly, grabbing my purse from the counter.
He didn’t argue. He didn’t need to. He just looked back down at his phone, already disengaged.
