The Silent Exit
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"Something came up at work. I can't make it for Sophia's birthday tonight."
I calmly closed the chat window with my husband.
Then I opened my social media feed and saw the photo he'd just been tagged: Liam, my husband, holding another woman's son, both of them beaming with joy.

My five-year-old daughter leaned against me, her voice a small whisper.
"Mommy, my birthday wish this year is… to never see daddy again."
So, even a child could see it.
The man who was always "too busy" for her school events, was the same man who would do everything for someone else's kid.
It was two in the morning, when Liam finally came home.
The sudden glare of the headlights beaming through the window made me instinctively cover my daughter’s eyes.

He leaned against the bedroom doorframe.
"Honey, I'm home. Why don't you wake Sophia up? We can still celebrate her birthday now."
I used to be obsessed with these family rituals.
Birthdays, holidays, anniversaries, even the smallest school activities—I'd insist Liam be there.

I didn't want Sophia to grow up like I did, knowing her father only through a phone calls.
But now—
I smoothed the blanket over my daughter, my voice flat. "Don't bother."
A flash of annoyance crossed Liam's face.
"Emma, I was just putting Lucas to bed. That's it. Don't read into it. This is exactly why I can't be honest with you, because you're always so suspicious."
I wasn't reading into it.
And from now on, I wouldn't be suspicious either.
"If you're done, please go to your own room. Don't wake Sophia. She has school in the morning."
He let out a cold laugh.
"Fine. But don't come crying to me later, saying I'm an absent father."
I turned away and switched off the lamp, gently patting the back of my daughter, who had stirred from the noise.
Absent?
It didn't matter anymore.
After all, Sophia's birthday wish was to never see him again.
...
The next morning, Liam didn't leave immediately after breakfast as he usually did.
He sat at the table, watching the morning news.
Just as we were about to leave, he stood up, grabbed his keys, and walked over to us, ruffling Sophia's hair.
"Daddy's taking you to school today."
He was speaking to our daughter, but his eyes were fixed on me.
Two years ago, when Sophia first started preschool, Liam drove her every single day.
But after his other woman, Isabella arrived, he started leaving earlier and earlier, claiming his morning meetings had been moved up.
I believed him, right up until three months ago, when I was at Sophia's new elementary school and I saw him.
The man who was supposed to be in a board meeting, was leaning over to lift a little boy out of the backseat of his car.
It wasn't that he didn't have time to take his daughter to school.
It was he had something more important to do.
We had a terrible fight that night.
The next day, Sophia stopped asking for him to drive her.
Even though I had already decided on a divorce, he was still her father.
I hesitated for a moment, then nodded.
A small, triumphant smile touched his lips as he scooped Sophia into his arms.
When he opened the car door, I froze.
The backseat was a mess of someone else's stuffs.
A Spider-Man water bottle, a toy bow and arrow set, a woman's shawl tossed carelessly on the leather.
Tucked into the seatback pocket was a framed "family photo."
He followed my gaze, and his expression soured.
"Isabella put that there. She said it makes Lucas happy."
He shot me a warning look.
"Don't even start your drama. It's not a big deal."
The old me would have shattered the frame, screamed and cried and demanded to know where Sophia and I stood in his heart.
But the new me just nodded.
"It's a nice family photo."
He stared at me, confused. "You're not angry?"
Angry?
Maybe I should have been angry.
But all I felt was a vast, hollow emptiness.
It was almost funny to me.
How could a man as sharp as Liam not see through such a clumsy, transparently manipulative scheme?
The answer was simple.
He saw it.
But he just didn't care.
"You should go now," I said. "Sophia's going to be late."
His lips tightened, but he said nothing, just opened the driver's side door.
As I was about to lift Sophia into her car seat, his phone rang.
The ringtone was a cheesy children's song.
"My dad is the best dad, the best dad in the world..."
A little boy's frantic sobs filled the air.
"Daddy! Daddy! Where did you go? Don't you want me and Mommy anymore?"
Liam hung up and, without a single glance in our direction, slid into the driver's seat.
"Lucas's asking for me. I'll have the driver take you today."
The black Maybach sped away, leaving us in a cloud of exhaust. I knelt down, worried about Sophia.
"Daddy had an emergency, sweetheart. Next time he's free, we'll all go together, okay?"
Sophia looked at me, her expression startlingly mature for a five-year-old.
"Daddy's never free, Mommy. All his time is for Lucas and his mommy."
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