My name is Amber, and I’m standing in the parking lot of a grocery store in a town three hundred miles from where I used to live, staring at a man I never thought I’d see again. My hands are shaking so hard I drop my keys. They hit the pavement with a metallic clink that sounds too loud in my ears.
“Amber… please, just hear me out.”
I should run. Every instinct in my body is screaming at me to run, but my legs won’t move. I’m frozen, looking at Marcus—my husband, or ex-husband, or whatever he is now—and all I can think about is the last time I saw him.
The night he pushed me toward the edge of our balcony and told me, “It will all be over soon.”
That was three years ago. “How did you find me?” My voice comes out as a whisper. He takes a step closer.
He looks older. There are lines around his eyes that weren’t there before. “It took a long time, but I had to find you.
The kids…”
“Don’t,” I hold up my hand. “Don’t you dare talk about them.”
“They miss you,” he says, his voice soft and pleading. “Emma asks about you every single day.
Tyler drew a picture of you last week and put it on his wall.”
The mention of their names is like a knife twisting in my chest. Emma is eight now. Tyler is six.
I left when they were five and three. I’ve missed birthdays, first days of school, lost teeth, bedtime stories. I left because I wanted to be alive for them someday, even if I couldn’t be there right then.
Let me tell you how this all started. I know what you’re thinking: no one just fakes their death and abandons their kids unless something really, really bad happened. You’re right.
Marcus and I met in college. He was charming, successful, the kind of guy who could walk into a room and own it. We got married two years after graduation, and for a while, things were perfect.
Everyone thought we were the ideal couple. Then Emma was born, and something shifted. Marcus became controlling.
He wanted to know where I was all the time, who I was talking to, what I was spending money on. He insisted I close my personal bank account. “Married people should share everything,” he’d said.
I thought it was just new-parent stress. I made excuses. I told myself he was just being protective.
My friend Jessica was the first to notice something was wrong. “Amber, does Marcus always check your phone like that?” she asked after he picked up my cell and scrolled through my messages while I was making coffee. “He’s just making sure I’m not missing anything important,” I lied.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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