Veronika gently lowered her cup of coffee, her fingers trembling slightly, rings glinting—each one a gift from her husband over two decades of marriage.
But across the Bellagio restaurant, her attention was locked on a single table where her husband Igor was sitting, laughing and caressing the hand of a young brunette.
— What a coincidence, she murmured. — What an incredible coincidence.
She’d asked him to bring her here so many times—he always had excuses: tired, busy, meetings. And now, here he was, vibrant and carefree with someone else.
A waiter approached.
— Anything else, ma’am?
— Yes, bring me the bill from that table. I’d like to give a gift. Don’t mention who paid.
Confused but obliging, the waiter nodded. Veronika pulled out the credit card Igor gave her for her birthday—”Spend it on yourself,” he had said. And she was. Just differently.
After paying, she passed his table. Igor didn’t notice her—or didn’t want to. She gave a faint smile. How often had she ignored what she didn’t want to see?
Outside, the air was crisp and full of clarity. “Well, Igor, you made your choice. Now it’s my turn.”
Back home, she walked into her study, calm replacing the tremble. She opened her laptop and created a new folder: “New Life.” From the closet, she retrieved a box of documents—things Igor had never bothered with.
The house, bought with the proceeds of her grandmother’s apartment, was in her name. She’d registered it that way when Igor claimed he needed all their funds to build his business. He never asked about the details.
Next, the bank accounts. Veronika logged in and began reviewing everything she’d tracked so diligently for years. A message arrived from Igor: “Running late at an important meeting. Don’t wait for dinner.”
She smiled. — Yes, dear. I saw how important it was.
She called their family lawyer.
— Good evening, Mikhail Stepanovich. Tomorrow, ten? Not at your office—the Swallow café. It’s delicate.
The next morning, Igor stumbled into the kitchen.
— How was your meeting? — she asked.
— Productive. New contract.
— Oh? What’s it called?
— What do you mean?
— Nothing. Just curious, — she replied with a sweet smile. — I have a meeting, too.
At the café, she laid out documents before the surprised lawyer.
— How fast can a divorce go if one person owns most of the assets?
He blinked. — Pardon?
— I want to know my rights.
After two hours of reviewing everything, he was impressed. — I’ve never seen anyone so prepared.
— I’m not acting on emotion, — she said. — I’m giving a gift.
At the bank, she closed the joint account, transferred funds, and blocked the cards—leaving Igor just his salary card.
— Thirty thousand should be enough for… important meetings.
That evening, Igor panicked.
— Why are the cards blocked?
— System glitch, maybe. We’ll look into it, — she said sweetly. — By the way, how was Bellagio?
He froze.
— You… were there?
— Don’t worry. I even paid your bill. Consider it an advance on your gift.
On their twentieth anniversary, Igor handed her roses.
— I booked a table at—
— No need, — she interrupted, handing him a folder. — Here’s your gift.
Inside were the divorce papers, proof of her sole ownership, and the restaurant bill.
— You’re doing this over a flirtation?
— No, I’m giving you freedom. Say hi to Natalya. The earrings looked lovely on her.
— Where are you going?
— Tuscany. Remember? I always dreamed of it.
At the door, she turned back.
— Funny, I’m grateful to you. Without your “meeting,” I’d never have dared.
In the taxi, she felt only lightness.
— Airport? — the driver asked.
— Yes, — she smiled. — To a new life.
From the plane, she read Igor’s message: “We can discuss everything! Come back!”
She deleted it.
— No, dear. My life is mine now. The best gift I could ever give myself.