Part5: My Husband Hugged His Secretary In The Front Seat Of My Car And Called Me Sensitive—So I Sold His House, His Car, And Let Her Watch Him Lose Everything…

PART 5

For several seconds, neither of us moved.

Snow drifted between us in soft, careless flakes.

David’s eyes grew wide. Disbelief arrived first. Then shame. Then something even worse.

Hope.

“Catherine?”

His voice was ruined, scraped raw by cold, cigarettes, and whatever life had done to him after I stopped protecting him from it.

Alex shifted slightly in front of me.

David saw him and flinched. That tiny reaction told me he remembered the auction. He remembered the man who had lured him into purchasing his own disgrace. But hunger overpowered pride.

He tried to rise.

His hands trembled as he reached for the crutches. One leg dragged stiffly beneath him. The other shook violently. He nearly slipped on the frozen pavement.

Alex caught his elbow before he fell.

The irony was so sharp I almost laughed.

David looked from Alex’s hand to his face, humiliated by the kindness.

“Don’t touch me,” he muttered, pulling away.

Alex let go without reacting.

David turned back to me. “I found you.”

I said nothing.

“I searched everywhere,” he said, his breath turning white in the air. “New York, then London, then here. I saw your gallery in a magazine someone left on a train. I knew God was giving me one chance.”

“God has a strange distribution system.”

His mouth shook.

“Cat, please.”

The nickname dropped at my feet like a dead bird.

“My name is Catherine.”

He swallowed. “Catherine. Please. Just listen.”

People passed around us. A young couple glanced over. An elderly woman slowed down, then kept walking. The city did what cities always do with suffering: it made space for it without stopping.

David’s face was almost impossible to recognize. The handsome arrogance had caved into hollows and scars. The edges of his eyes were yellow. His hands were split and rough. The man who once wore Italian suits and corrected waiters about wine temperature now smelled like old alcohol, antiseptic, and snow-damp wool.

“Cecilia robbed me,” he said.

“I heard.”

“She took everything. My wallet, my watch, the cash I had left. She told the nurse she was my fiancée, took my belongings, and disappeared. I woke up in the hospital alone.”

“How unfortunate.”

His eyes searched mine, begging for tenderness.

“My parents cut me off. They said I embarrassed the family. The company collapsed. Insurance barely covered anything. Rehab was hell. I tried to come back, Catherine. I tried.”

I looked at his crutches.

“Apparently not enough.”

He flinched.

“I deserved that.”

“You deserved worse.”

“I know.” Then he started crying, openly, messily, tears carving lines through the grime on his face. “I know. I was insane. I threw away the only woman who ever loved me. I see it now. Every night I see it. You in the rain. You in the back seat. You on the office floor.”

Something cold moved through me.

So he remembered.

Good.

“I hate myself,” he said.

“That must be exhausting.”

“It is.” He reached toward me. Alex shifted. David dropped his hand. “I’m sick. I can’t work. I sleep wherever police don’t move me. I haven’t eaten since yesterday.”

I looked at the coin cup.

A year earlier, I would have emptied my wallet, called a physician, booked a hotel room, arranged care, and blamed myself for not seeing his suffering sooner.

That woman felt very far away.

“Why did you come here?” I asked.

“To apologize.”

“No.”

He blinked.

“You came because you ran out of people to use.”

His face collapsed.

“That’s not true.”

“It is exactly true. If Cecilia had stayed, you would still be calling me bitter. If your company had survived, you would still be telling investors I was unstable. If your legs worked, you would still be walking away from accountability.”

“No,” he whispered.

“Yes.”

He dropped to his knees in the slush.

Several people were staring now. Alex’s jaw tightened, but he stayed silent.

David pressed his hands together. “Please. I’ll do anything. I’ll sign anything. I’ll be nothing. Just don’t leave me like this.”

A laugh slipped out of me, quiet and stunned.

He looked up, confused.

“David,” I said. “You left me like this long before I left you.”

He shook his head violently. “We had ten years.”

“We had ten years where I loved you better than you deserved.”

“And I ruined it.”

“Yes.”

“I can fix it.”

“No.”

“You don’t know that.”

“I do.”

He dragged himself closer, one leg trailing behind him. “Catherine, please. Take me home.”

The words were so absurd I almost felt sorry for him.

Home.

As if home were only a building.

As if he had not watched me become homeless inside my own marriage while he decorated the front seat with another woman.

“You do not have a home with me,” I said.

His breathing turned frantic.

“In the eyes of God, we’re still—”

“Do not bring God into the wreckage you made.”

He went silent.

I stepped closer and looked down at him. Not with cruelty. Not with tenderness. Simply with clarity.

For the first time, I saw David without memory softening him. He was not a tragic hero. Not a ruined king. Not a man destroyed by temptation.

He was a man who had mistaken a woman’s love for infrastructure.

And when the infrastructure was removed, he fell apart.

“I waited for this moment once,” I said. “I imagined you begging. I imagined telling you all the ways you broke me. I imagined making you understand.”

His eyes lifted.

“But now that you’re here, I realize something.”

“What?” he whispered.

“I don’t need you to understand anymore.”

His face froze.

That was the real freedom.

Not the money.

Not Berlin.

Not the gallery.

Not even watching his empire decay.

Freedom was standing before the person who had once held your heart and no longer needing him to believe you.

“I don’t hate you,” I said.

Hope flickered again, small and dangerous.

Then I finished.

“Hating you would mean I still care. And I don’t.”

Snow continued to fall.

David stared at me as though I had struck him.

“You don’t mean that.”

“I do.”

“No. You loved me.”

“I loved who I thought you were.”

“I’m still him.”

“No, David. You are a stranger whose name I happen to know.”

The sentence entered him slowly.

I watched it put out the final light in his eyes.

Bankruptcy had not done that.

The accident had not done that.

Cecilia’s betrayal had not done that.

My indifference did.

Because somewhere inside him, beneath the ego and entitlement and decay, David had believed there would always be one door left open.

Mine.

He was wrong.

Click Here to continues Read​​​​ Full Ending Story👉Part6: My Husband Hugged His Secretary In The Front Seat Of My Car And Called Me Sensitive—So I Sold His House, His Car, And Let Her Watch Him Lose Everything…

 

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