She Spent $110,000 On His Card. Then He Opened The Folder-olive

When Claire Whitman hugged me goodbye outside my apartment in San Diego, she did it like she was leaving with a clean heart.

Her cheek pressed against mine, cool and soft, and her perfume stayed in the air after she stepped away.

It was expensive perfume.

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Sweet enough to feel harmless.

That was always Claire’s gift.

She could make a lie smell like flowers.

“Take care of yourself, Mason,” she whispered.

The sun had almost slipped behind the apartment roofs, and the street outside still held the heat of the day.

Somebody’s dog barked from a balcony.

A rideshare idled at the curb with its brake lights glowing red against the pavement.

A small American flag on a neighbor’s porch moved in the breeze like nothing important was happening.

I stood there with my hands in my pockets and watched Claire walk away from me.

Her cream-colored coat shifted when she reached for the car door.

That was when I saw the little bulge in the side pocket.

My credit card was inside it.

I did not move.

I did not call her name.

I did not ask for it back.

I only lifted one hand when she looked through the window and waved.

She smiled as the car pulled away.

That smile had once made me feel chosen.

By then, it only made me feel prepared.

Three months earlier, it would have destroyed me.

Claire had been my fiancée once.

Not a casual girlfriend.

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