My Wife Chose Her Ex-Husband, So I Took The London Transfer Instead-hamyt - Chainityai

My Wife Chose Her Ex-Husband, So I Took The London Transfer Instead-hamyt

Clara did not think I would leave. That was the part I understood only later.

For three months, she had been practicing the kind of disrespect that depends on the other person staying polite. She would come home from another weekend with Adrien smelling like expensive perfume and espresso, tell me he was going through a rough patch, and wait for me to nod like the understanding husband. I nodded too many times.

Adrien was her ex-husband. Not an old classmate. Not a coworker. Not a harmless neighbor who needed help moving a couch. Her ex-husband, the man she had once promised forever to before deciding forever was too long. When he came back into town, Clara acted as if his emotional weather was suddenly our household responsibility.

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At first, it was Saturday coffee. Then Sunday walks. Then Friday movies. Then long texts with the kind of smile she used to give me across a dinner table. I told myself I was not insecure. I told myself mature marriages required trust. I told myself a lot of things, because denial is easier when the alternative is admitting your wife is slowly choosing someone else in front of you.

The morning she gave me the ultimatum, she was wearing the green anniversary dress I had bought her. I asked her to stay home for once. One Saturday. Pancakes, bad television, any ordinary thing that said we were still a couple.

She said Adrien was expecting her.

That one sentence pulled the blindfold off. He was expecting her, and I was supposed to accept that.

When I asked where that left her husband, she looked at me like I had become unreasonable. Then she said if I did not trust her with her ex-husband every weekend, maybe we should not be together.

I said she was absolutely right.

She blinked like I had answered in another language. I think she expected an argument. Maybe she expected me to beg. Maybe she expected jealousy, tears, a slammed door, something she could later describe to Adrien as proof that I was controlling. Instead, I gave her the answer she had asked for.

After she left, I accepted the London transfer.

My company had offered it twice already. Better position, better salary, a furnished flat near the Thames, a team of my own. I had turned it down because Clara said she could never leave her life behind. She meant her family, her friends, her town, and, as I finally understood, the man she had been spending every weekend with.

The acceptance email was short. I did not explain my marriage. I did not mention Adrien. I simply wrote that I was ready if the offer still stood.

It stood.

They wanted me in two weeks.

Clara tried to fix the words the next morning. She said I had misunderstood her. She said she was frustrated. She said she never meant we should actually split. It was amazing how quickly an ultimatum became a misunderstanding once I stopped being afraid of it.

I told her trust mattered, but so did respect. So did common sense. So did not dressing up for your ex-husband while your actual husband sat at home wondering when he had become the backup plan.

That started two weeks of emotional weather. Clara cried in the kitchen. Clara shouted in the hallway. Clara promised she would only see Adrien once a month. Clara offered counseling. Clara said I was throwing away three years of marriage.

I told her I was not throwing it away. I was picking up what she had already dropped.

Then I packed.

The apartment lease was in my name. Clara had kept her parents’ address for tax reasons, which had always sounded like one of those little adult shortcuts people convince themselves will never matter. It mattered when I packed her things too. I did it neatly, because cruelty was not the point. Her clothes, books, makeup, shoes, everything went into labeled boxes by the door.

She screamed that I could not kick her out of her own home.

I showed her the lease.

That was when she went to her mother.

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