She thought about that.
Then smiled.
“Okay.”
And just like that, she returned to watching the clouds.
Children are remarkable.
Sometimes they heal faster than adults.
What Ethan never understood was that I had spent two years preparing.
Two years watching suspicious transfers.
Questionable investments.
Hidden accounts.
He thought I wasn’t paying attention.
But while he was busy with Vanessa, I was rebuilding myself.
Three years earlier, my grandmother had passed away.
She left me something Ethan never knew existed.
Forty percent ownership in a London-based technology company founded by my uncle.
At the time, the shares were valuable.
By the time my divorce was finalized, they were worth nearly twelve million dollars.
I never told Ethan.
Not once.
Because shortly after the inheritance arrived, I discovered the affair.
And something told me to stay quiet.
So I did.
I hired attorneys.
Financial advisors.
Investigators.
I documented everything.
Every lie.
Every transfer.
Every attempt to hide assets.
By the time Ethan realized I wasn’t financially dependent on him, it was too late.
Six months later, life looked very different.
Noah attended a private school outside London.
Emma joined a dance academy she loved.
We lived in a beautiful townhouse overlooking a small park.
For the first time in years, our home felt peaceful.
One rainy afternoon, my phone rang.
Daniel.
“You might want to sit down.”
I laughed.
“That sounds serious.”
“It is.”
“What happened?”
“Ethan’s being investigated.”
I wasn’t surprised.
“Financial issues?”
“Worse.”
Apparently, after Vanessa disappeared, Ethan learned she had been involved with multiple men simultaneously.
Several of the business accounts he’d hidden money in had also been tied to fraudulent transactions.
The tax authorities became interested.
Then law enforcement.
The investigation spread quickly.
Within months, his company lost major contracts.
Investors pulled out.
His finances collapsed.
The same family that once celebrated him now argued constantly.
Even Lauren moved away.
“What about Vanessa?” I asked.
Daniel chuckled.
“No one’s seen her in months.”
I looked out the window at Emma playing in the garden.
“Noah just scored the winning goal at soccer practice.”
Daniel laughed.
“I think you got the better ending.”
Maybe.
But I didn’t feel victorious.
Not exactly.
Because revenge had never been the goal.
Freedom was.
That evening, after dinner, Noah looked up from his homework.
“Mom?”
“Yes?”
“Are we happy now?”
The question caught me off guard.
I looked around our dining room.
The laughter.
The peace.
The absence of tension.
The feeling of safety.
Then I smiled.
A real smile.
The kind I hadn’t worn in years.
“Yeah.”
Noah grinned.
Emma raised her juice glass.
“To our new life.”
I clinked mine against hers.
“To our new life.”
Far across the ocean, Ethan was still dealing with the consequences of the choices he made.
But that chapter no longer belonged to me.
I wasn’t looking back.
The woman who walked into that mediation office expecting to lose everything had been wrong.
Because sometimes losing the wrong people isn’t a tragedy.
It’s a rescue.
And sometimes the best revenge isn’t making someone regret leaving.
It’s building a life so full of peace, joy, and possibility that one day you realize you no longer care whether they regret it at all.