“On this special day,” he continued, “I want to announce that I’m divorcing my wife. And I want to introduce Lydia to my family and friends.”
I couldn’t move.
Forty years.
Had I truly meant so little?
Beside me, my daughter Claire squeezed my hand.
“Mom,” she whispered, “don’t worry. I’ll handle this.”
Then she stood up.
PART 2
Claire walked toward her father with a calmness I did not understand and gently took the microphone from his hand.
“Oh, Dad,” she said, her voice clear across the silent restaurant. “I’m so happy for you. Actually, I have something for you too.”
She reached into her bag and pulled out an envelope.
“Open it now,” she said. “Consider it my gift to you and Lydia.”
David smirked as he took it, still drunk on his own announcement.
But when he opened the envelope, his face changed.
Inside were forty handwritten pages.
Each page had a number.
Each page represented one year of our marriage.
“Year three,” Claire said. “Mom worked night shifts in a hospital cafeteria so you could finish graduate school. You came home asking why dinner wasn’t ready. Do you remember that?”
David’s hand trembled.
“Year eight,” she continued. “You had spine surgery. Mom slept in a hospital chair for three nights and never left your side.”
The entire restaurant was silent.
“Year fourteen. Your mother’s funeral. Mom drove four hours to support you while she had pneumonia and told no one because she didn’t want that day to be about her.”
David slowly flipped through the pages.
“Year twenty-seven,” Claire said. “Your business almost collapsed. Mom sold the jewelry her own mother left her. You never asked where the money came from. You just assumed everything worked out.”
Someone in the back began crying.
Claire let the silence sit.
“There are thirty-six more pages,” she said. “Every year. Every sacrifice. Every thing Mom never mentioned because she wasn’t keeping score.”
David turned to the final page.