Her Husband Toasted A Younger Woman, Then The Deed Hit The Table-hothiyenvy_5

My husband ended our marriage in front of everyone we knew, and he did it with champagne in his hand.

Victor always did like an audience.

That night was supposed to be our twenty-fifth wedding anniversary dinner.

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He had chosen the restaurant ballroom himself, a polished room with marble floors, white tablecloths, gold candles, and tall windows that looked out over the parking lot where our friends had lined up their SUVs and sedans under the soft evening light.

There was a small American flag near the reception desk, tucked beside a vase of roses, the kind of quiet decoration nobody notices until later.

I noticed everything later.

At the time, I noticed the smell of butter from the kitchen, the cold stem of my water glass, and the scrape of a server’s shoe when the room went silent.

I noticed my sister watching me from two seats away.

I noticed Victor’s assistant, Lila, standing too close behind his chair.

She was twenty-seven, polished, silver-dressed, and smiling like she had been promised a prize.

Victor tapped his champagne glass with a spoon, and people laughed softly because that is what people do before a toast.

They raised their phones.

They expected sweetness.

They expected some speech about twenty-five years, good and bad, richer and poorer, sickness and health.

They expected a husband.

What they got was Victor.

He lifted the microphone and looked at me with that clean, public smile he used whenever he wanted people to think he was reasonable.

Then he said, “Twenty-five years is enough.”

The room went quiet in a way I had never heard before.

It was not polite quiet.

It was the kind of silence that pulls the heat out of your skin.

Victor kept going.

“I want someone younger,” he said. “I want you out of the apartment tomorrow.”

For three seconds, nobody moved.

A fork stopped halfway to someone’s mouth.

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