The night of that anniversary started with a text that felt routine, innocent even, but it carried a weight I hadn’t yet understood. Seven fourteen p.m.—“I’m stuck at work. Happy 2nd anniversary, babe. I’ll make it up to you this weekend.” I smiled briefly, assuming distance, fatigue, and work obligations, unaware that the small screen of my phone was a portal to the betrayal I had yet to witness. Within a minute, I was sitting two tables away from him in a crowded Chicago restaurant, frozen as I saw him kiss another woman with a familiarity I could never have imagined. My hand clutched the gift I had brought—a vintage silver watch he had once admired, a token of my attention, my care, and my love—and yet, at that moment, it felt as though I were holding a relic from a life that no longer existed. The hours I had spent preparing, the drive downtown, the excitement of surprise, all collided violently with the clarity of what I was witnessing. He wore the navy shirt I had given him the previous Christmas, and she leaned in easily, effortlessly, as if my presence, my history with him, and everything we had shared were invisible. That brief, crushing realization—the casual ease of their interaction—was the kind of sting that reaches deep into your chest and lodges itself there. My chair scraped the floor as I pushed back, an instinctive reaction I barely registered, and before I could move further, a man appeared beside me.
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