My Wife Wanted A Clean Divorce Until The Charity Gala Played Her Recording-hamyt - Chainityai

My Wife Wanted A Clean Divorce Until The Charity Gala Played Her Recording-hamyt

The radio on my workbench was older than my father would have been. A 1940s Philco, walnut cabinet cracked along one corner, brass dial dulled by years of fingers turning it through other people’s lonely nights. It hissed at me while I worked, spitting static and half a trumpet line from some old jazz station that probably only existed after midnight.

That radio had been dead for three weeks.

Somehow, it was still more honest than my marriage.

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Jill’s voice came through the floorboards before the trumpet could find the song.

“Nick? Where is the bank statement for the inheritance account?”

I closed my eyes. The soldering iron smoked beside my hand. For a second, I just sat there in the basement and listened to the house above me, the same house where Jill and I had once talked about kids, vacations, a dog, a porch swing, all the soft little plans married people make before money teaches one of them who they really are.

Six months earlier, Jill’s father had died.

He left her five million, the Vermont house, and a set of investments she pretended to understand by the end of the first week. Before that, she had been a fitness instructor who forgot her banking password twice a month. After the funeral, she started saying things like “asset movement” and “clean restructuring” while looking at me as if I were a dent in the floor.

I went upstairs wiping grease off my hands.

Jill stood in the kitchen in yoga pants and a perfect tan, ripping through the mail. She had not looked that focused on me in months. Not in bed. Not at dinner. Not when I asked if she wanted to come downstairs and hear the radio once it finally worked.

“Which statement?” I asked.

She did not look up. “The Chase one.”

Of course.

The one I had found in the recycling bin the day before.

The one showing ninety thousand moving into an account I did not recognize.

“Try your purse,” I said. “That is where you keep everything important these days.”

Her head lifted slowly. The look she gave me was not anger. Anger still has heat. This was colder. This was math.

“Don’t be sarcastic, Nick. It doesn’t suit you.”

“Neither does being married to a stranger,” I said. “But here we are.”

That was when she told me we needed to talk.

We sat at the kitchen table where we had planned our wedding and signed our first mortgage papers. Jill folded her hands on the surface like she was about to lead a meeting.

“I want a divorce,” she said.

No tremor.

No apology.

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