…wasn’t theirs anymore.
The driver slowed to a stop in front of the building, but my husband frowned immediately. The doorman who used to greet him by name didn’t move.
“Strange,” the secretary said, adjusting her sunglasses, still glowing from the Maldives sun.
They stepped out, laughing—until they reached the lobby.
“Can I help you?” the new concierge asked.
“My penthouse,” my husband replied, impatient. “We’ve just returned.”
The concierge hesitated. “Sir… that unit was sold last week.”
The smile fell off his face. “That’s not possible.”
But it was.
—
By the time he pulled out his phone, he already knew.
My number rang once.
Twice.
Then I answered.
“Where are you?” he demanded. “What is this nonsense about the apartment?”
I let a small pause stretch between us.
“I told you not to go to the airport,” I said calmly. “You made other plans.”
“That’s my home!”
“No,” I corrected gently. “It was ours.”
—
What he hadn’t bothered to remember—too distracted with his secretary and his perfect little getaway—was that the penthouse had been purchased in my name.
A detail he once dismissed as “just paperwork.”
—
“I sold it,” I continued. “Cash deal. Quick closing.”
There was silence on the other end now. Not anger—yet. Just the slow realization creeping in.
“Where am I supposed to go?” he asked finally.
I almost laughed—but didn’t.
“Maybe she deserves to figure that out with you,” I said.
—
The line went dead.
—
By then, I was already gone.
New country. New number. New life.
No penthouse. No husband.
Just peace.
—
And somewhere behind me, two people stood in a lobby that no longer recognized them… realizing a little too late that while they were chasing a temporary escape—
I had quietly taken the only thing that was ever truly mine… and walked away for good.