“You left your wife alone after surgery,” she said, each word sharp. “With a newborn. You walked away.”
He laughed awkwardly.
“It was just a week—”
“A week?” she stepped closer. “A week can break someone.”
He went quiet.
“She could barely stand,” Margaret continued. “And you left anyway.”
He tried to look at me.
But I didn’t look away.
Not this time.
“Can I come in?” he asked softly.
“No,” she answered.
Firm. Final.
And in that moment, I understood.
She wasn’t protecting him.
She was protecting me.
I stepped forward, holding Ava.
I looked at him.
No anger. No tears.
Just truth.
“I don’t need you anymore.”
He blinked, confused.
“Lena…”
“It wasn’t a mistake,” I said. “It was a choice.”
Silence filled the space between us.
“And I’ve made mine,” I continued. “I won’t wait for someone who leaves when I need them most.”
He tried to step closer.
Margaret didn’t move.
He stopped.
Looked at both of us.
And finally… he understood.
No shouting.
No drama.
Just the end.
He picked up his suitcase and walked away.
I closed the door, leaning back against it.
And for the first time…
it didn’t hurt.
It felt light.
Because I wasn’t being abandoned anymore.
I was choosing myself.
And I wasn’t alone.
Margaret was there.
Ava was in my arms.
And that… was everything that truly mattered.