He looked older. The arrogance that once wrapped around him like a coat had frayed. He still wore suits, but they weren’t bespoke anymore. Alimony payments and garnished wages had taken a bite out of his lifestyle. There were faint lines around his mouth that hadn’t been there before.

I waited for the familiar ache in my chest.

It didn’t come.

“You don’t miss me,” I said gently. “You miss having a fan. A soft place to land. Someone who made you feel like a hero even when you weren’t.” I set my tablet down. “I spent eight years trying to be that person. I’m done.”

He looked away, jaw clenched.

I picked up my bag.

“Oh, and Steven,” I added on my way out.

“Yes?” he asked, turning back with a flicker of something—hope, maybe, though I hated to name it.

“You have a smudge on your collar,” I said. “Fix it before the client meeting. It’s not a good look for the company.”

He touched his collar instinctively, fingers brushing a faint stain I’d noticed as he spoke. For a moment, the sensation must have been familiar—the way I used to straighten his tie before he left for work, remind him to bring an umbrella, tuck a folded note into his pocket.

But this time, I walked out without waiting to see if he fixed it.

The elevator doors slid closed behind me. When they opened on the ground floor, the city greeted me with crisp air and the hum of traffic.

My phone buzzed.

It was a message from Ethan.

Dinner tonight?
I know a place with excellent food and absolutely no peeling wallpaper.

I smiled. The movement felt easy, unforced.

Sounds perfect, I replied.

I stepped out onto the sidewalk, the heels of my shoes clicking with every confident stride. I hailed a taxi. Not because I had to, but because I wanted to.

I was no longer the woman counting coins in her palm, afraid to take up space. I wasn’t the wife who waited at home with discounted groceries while her husband wore someone else’s dreams on his arm.

I was the woman who had walked through betrayal, bleeding, and come out carrying the deed to the life that had once been kept from her.

Once upon a time, my past had been a debt I kept paying and paying, never quite catching up.

Now, it was settled. Account closed. Lessons learned, interest collected.

The future, at last, was mine alone.

And it felt, in the best possible way, like pure profit.