“Wow,” I said. “You guys really took ‘family support’ to the next level.”
Then I turned and walked out.
No yelling.
No screaming.
No thrown objects.
Just… walking away.
I got into my car, hands shaking so badly I could barely start it.
I drove without direction—just distance.
My phone buzzed nonstop. Daniel. Kara. My mom.
I ignored them all.
Eventually, I ended up in a drugstore parking lot, gasping for breath.
I called my best friend, Hannah.
She answered immediately.
“Hey, what’s—”
“I caught Daniel,” I said. “With Kara. In our bed.”
There was a brief silence.
Then she said calmly, “Text me your location. Don’t move.”
Twenty minutes later, she was beside me.
“Tell me everything,” she said.
I did.
By the end, she looked ready to burn my house down.
“You’re not going back there tonight,” she said firmly.
“I don’t have anywhere else,” I whispered.
“You have my guest room,” she replied. “Let’s go.”
Of course, Daniel showed up.
Hannah and I were sitting on her couch when someone pounded on the door.
She looked at me. “Want me to send him away?”
“No,” I said. “I want to hear what excuse he comes up with.”
She opened the door slightly, chain still on.
“Five minutes,” she told him.
He looked wrecked—hair disheveled, shirt inside out.
“Meredith, please,” he said. “Can we talk?”
I stepped forward.
“Talk,” I said.
He flinched.
“It’s not what you think,” he blurted.
I actually laughed.
“Oh?” I said. “You weren’t half-naked with my sister in our bedroom?”
“It’s… complicated,” he said. “We’ve been talking. I’ve been struggling since the surgery. She’s been helping me process.”
“Helping you process,” I repeated. “Right. With her shirt off.”
He ran a hand through his hair.
“I felt trapped,” he admitted. “You gave me your kidney. I owe you my life. I love you, but I felt like I couldn’t breathe—”
“So naturally,” I interrupted, “you decided to sleep with my sister.”
“It just happened,” he said.
“It did not ‘just happen,’” I snapped. “How long?”
He hesitated.
“How long?” I demanded again.
“A few months,” he admitted. “Since… around Christmas.”
Christmas.
I remembered Kara laughing in my kitchen.
Daniel’s arm around me as we watched the kids open gifts.
My stomach turned.
“Get out,” I said.
“Mer, please—”
“Out,” I repeated. “You can talk to my lawyer.”
He tried to speak again.
Hannah shut the door.
I collapsed onto the floor and sobbed until I had nothing left.
The next morning, I called a divorce attorney.
Her name was Priya—calm, sharp, unshaken.
“Tell me everything,” she said.
So I did.
The kidney. The affair. My sister.
She didn’t even look surprised.
“Do you want counseling,” she asked, “or are you done?”
“I’m done,” I said. “I want out.”
“Then we move fast,” she said.
We separated.
He moved into an apartment.
I stayed in the house with the kids.
I told them gently, “Dad and I aren’t going to live together anymore. But we both love you very much.”
Ella looked down at her hands.
“Did we do something wrong?” she whispered.
My heart broke.
“No,” I said. “This is about grown-up choices. Not you.”
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