I did not touch the designer gowns hanging in the walk-in closet, clothes Arthur had bought to make me look presentable at charity functions.

I did not take the diamonds or the pearls or any of the jewelry that came with being a Sterling wife.

I reached into the very back of the closet and pulled out the beat-up suitcase I had arrived with three years ago.

The same suitcase I had used in college, covered in stickers from places I had never been but dreamed of visiting.

I stripped off the expensive silk dress I was wearing and pulled on my old jeans and a white t-shirt.

Clothes that were mine, bought with money I had earned, worn thin from actual life.

As I zipped the suitcase closed, the weight that had been sitting on my chest for three years finally lifted.

My phone buzzed in my pocket.

It was the Sterling family lawyer, a man named Robert who had always looked at me with thinly veiled distaste.

“Ms. Vance, the CEO wants to confirm you have signed the papers?”

“It is done,” I said, my voice steady. “Tell him he got exactly what he paid for.”

I walked down the stairs for the last time.

The living room was empty. They did not even bother to watch me leave.

Perfect.

I walked out the front door of the Sterling Estate, pulling my suitcase behind me.

The night air was cold and clean, washing away three years of suffocation.

I hailed a car using an app on my phone. I did not go to my parents. I did not want them to see me like this, broken and discarded.

They had warned me about marrying into money. They had told me the Sterlings would never accept a girl from Queens whose father taught high school history.

I had told them love was enough.

I had been so young. So stupid.

I checked into a hotel under my maiden name, Nora Vance, and lay in the clean, impersonal bed, staring at the ceiling.

For the first time in three years, I was alone.

For the first time in three years, I could breathe.

The next morning, I woke up nauseated and dizzy.

I had been feeling off for weeks, attributing it to stress, to the constant tension of living in that house.

But something told me to go to a clinic.

I sat in the waiting room, filling out forms under my maiden name, surrounded by other women in various stages of life.

When they called me back, the doctor was a kind woman in her fifties with gentle hands and a no-nonsense demeanor.