Stories: If you’re reading this

For twenty years, Jack had been my almost. Almost husband. Almost forever. Until he cheated—and I finally chose myself.

I left him three years ago. Six months later, he married her. I heard through mutual friends that they had a lavish wedding, matching watches, and curated smiles. I didn’t attend, didn’t care. I built a quieter life instead. I met Daniel. We had a daughter with curious eyes and a laugh that filled every empty corner Jack had once occupied.

Jack still texted me on birthdays. Short messages. Hope you’re okay. You deserve happiness. I never answered.

When he found out I’d had a baby, though, he sent one last message: So you were cheating too.

I stared at it for a long time, then deleted it. Silence was my final word.

A few months later, he died in a car crash.

The news hit strangely—not grief exactly, but the feeling of a door slamming shut somewhere far away. I thought that would be the end of it.

It wasn’t.

Two weeks later, a lawyer called. Jack had left his entire estate to me. Seven hundred thousand dollars.

I thought it was a mistake.

Then his wife called. Not grieving. Furious. She demanded I sign it over to her and their kids immediately. Said it was mine only because of “some clerical error.” Said decent people wouldn’t steal from widows.

I almost believed her.

Then the letter arrived.

It was handwritten, folded twice, my name on the front in Jack’s familiar crooked script.

If you’re reading this, it began, I’m gone. I don’t expect forgiveness. I don’t deserve it. But I want you to know the truth.

He wrote that he’d cheated because he’d panicked. We’d been together so long he was terrified I’d realize I could do better. So he sabotaged us first. The marriage afterward, he admitted, was rushed and hollow. “I thought I wanted a new life,” he wrote, “but all I really wanted was the one I broke.”

The money, he explained, wasn’t guilt. It was gratitude.

You gave me twenty years of loyalty, patience, and love. I repaid you with betrayal. This is the only apology I have left.

At the bottom, one last line:

Please don’t give it away out of kindness. You already gave me more than I earned.

I folded the letter slowly, hands steady.

The next day, I met his wife at a café. She arrived ready to argue, eyes sharp, voice rehearsed.

I slid a copy of the will—and the letter—across the table.

She read. Her expression changed. Not softer. Just… smaller.

“I’m keeping it,” I said gently. “Not out of spite. Out of respect for what he asked.”

She didn’t argue again.

That night, I opened a savings account in my daughter’s name.

Not because of Jack.

But because, for the first time, his last choice finally gave something good to my future instead of taking from it.

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