He took another sip of orange juice like he was casually watching a game.
“That I’m with Alyssa now. She makes me happy! You’ve let yourself go, and that’s on you.”
“You’re with her?” I asked.
“Yes.”
That second yes hurt the most, because it meant he’d practiced this moment, and I was the last person to learn my own life had already been replaced.
And that was it.
No apology. No shame. Just the truth delivered like it was a minor inconvenience I was expected to deal with.
“She makes me feel alive again,” he added, like he was performing a breakup speech.
Alive?
“We have six kids, Cole. What do you think this is, a coma?”
“You wouldn’t understand,” he said. “You don’t even see yourself anymore. You used to care about how you looked. How we looked.”
I stared at him.
He continued. “When’s the last time you wore real clothes? Or something that wasn’t stained?”
My breath caught. “So that’s it? You got bored? Found someone with tighter abs and nicer leggings, and suddenly the last sixteen years are what—a mistake?”
“You’ve let yourself go,” he said bluntly.
The words hit like a slap.