I watched him sign our divorce papers like he was escaping a burden. “You’ll manage,” he said, ignoring

I watched Ethan Miller sign the divorce papers like he was shedding a burden he’d been desperate to escape. The hospital room carried the sterile scent of disinfectant and heated plastic from the ventilator tubes. Our premature triplets—Noah, Lily, and Miles—lay in three bassinets, each connected to monitors that beeped too frequently and too loudly.

“You’ll figure it out,” Ethan said flatly, not even glancing at the flashing numbers. His eyes drifted past the nurses, past the oxygen lines, past me—like we were nothing more than obstacles in his path. He straightened his tie—the same one Vanessa Kline had admired at the office holiday party.

Vanessa: his boss, his so-called mentor, the woman who laughed just a little too eagerly at everything he said. I didn’t cry. I had already run out of tears at three in the morning when Miles’ oxygen levels dropped and a nurse rushed in like a hurricane.

I had already pleaded with Ethan weeks earlier, when he started coming home later and later, his cologne too strong, his phone always face-down. “Ethan,” I said quietly, “they’re still fighting.”

He let out a breath as though I’d asked for something unreasonable. “Claire, I can’t live like this anymore.

I need… a life.”

A life. As if our children were an inconvenience. He leaned closer, coffee on his breath.

“I’ve spoken to my lawyer. It’s straightforward. You’ll handle medical decisions.

I’ll pay whatever the court orders.”

“And their therapy? Long-term care?” I asked, keeping my voice level while my nails pressed into my palm. He shrugged.

“We’ll deal with it.”

I signed too. The pen felt unusually heavy. But I didn’t sign out of agreement—I signed because I was prepared.

Earlier that morning, in a conference room across town, my signature had finalized a $750 million logistics contract for my company—work I’d done quietly for years while Ethan dismissed it as “paper-pushing.”

Ethan stood, already mentally free. “I’m moving on,” he said. “Vanessa understands me.”
“Good luck,” I replied as he walked out.

Two days later, headlines carried my name. My phone buzzed nonstop. Then Ethan called.

“Claire… is it true? The contract?” His voice cracked. I looked at my sleeping babies.

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