She Cut Off Her Ex’s Mother, Then the Door Pounding Started-Tien3004

The call came before my coffee had even cooled.

My kitchen still smelled like espresso, lemon dish soap, and the expensive candle I had finally lit without worrying that Eleanor would call it “trying too hard.”

The city outside my windows was waking up in its usual impatient way, all horns and delivery trucks and gray morning light reflecting off glass.

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Inside my apartment, everything was quiet.

For the first time in five years, the quiet felt like mine.

Then Anthony’s name flashed across my phone.

I almost let it ring.

The divorce had been final for less than twenty-four hours, and there was nothing left to discuss that had not already been stamped, signed, scanned, billed, argued over, and dragged through our attorneys’ inboxes.

Still, some part of me answered because old habits do not disappear the minute a judge signs a decree.

They just stand in the doorway and wait to see if you will let them back in.

“What on earth did you do, Marissa?” Anthony barked.

There was no hello.

There was never a hello when his mother was upset.

His voice filled my kitchen through the speakerphone, sharp and entitled, bouncing off the quartz counter and the stainless-steel refrigerator like he still lived there and still had the right to take up all the air.

“My mother’s platinum card was just declined at Bergdorf Goodman,” he said. “They treated her like a common shoplifter in front of half the Upper East Side.”

I looked down at my coffee.

A tiny ring of espresso foam clung to the side of the cup.

“She is completely humiliated,” he added, as if humiliation were a federal emergency when it happened to Eleanor and a household chore when it happened to me.

Beside my laptop sat the printed divorce decree.

The county clerk’s electronic notice had come through at 9:17 a.m. the day before.

Judgment entered.

Marriage dissolved.

Accounts separated.

The credit card company had confirmed the authorized-user cancellation at 11:03 a.m.

I had saved the confirmation number in the same folder where I kept five years of statements, screenshots, billing disputes, attorney emails, and notes I had once been too embarrassed to write down.

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