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Chapter 8 - The Goodbye That Hurt the Most

Maya opened the front door slowly. Her hands were shaking. Her eyes were red and swollen from crying. It had only been a day since she was discharged from the hospital.

The nurses had said she was well enough to go home, but no one warned her how heavy coming back would feel.

The house was exactly as she had left it, but something inside her had shifted. Every corner held memories she wasn't ready to face, and every step inside felt like walking into a life that no longer belonged to her.

This was the same house where she had cooked meals every day, folded clothes with a smile, kissed scraped knees, and waited by the door for her husband to return. Now, it felt like a place filled with ghosts. Her love, her trust, her years—it was all wasted.

She walked to the bedroom, opened the closet, and pulled out a suitcase. The soft hum of the zipper sounded louder than thunder in the silence of the room. Her hands trembled as she folded her clothes. Her heart was breaking with every shirt, every memory she packed away.

Just then, little footsteps rushed down the hallway.

"Mom?" a small voice called.

Maya paused.

Jamie stood in the doorway, holding his toy car in one hand. His eyes were wide with worry.

"Mom, what are you doing? Where are you going?" he asked.

Maya slowly turned to him, trying to keep her face calm. Her heart squeezed tightly in her chest. She had raised him for so many years. She had kissed his forehead every night and stayed up with him through fevers. Yet now… now everything had changed.

"I have to go away for a while, baby," she said gently, kneeling down to his height. "There's something I need to take care of."

Jamie blinked, processing her words. Then, instead of looking sad, he lit up.

"Really?" Jamie said excitedly. "So… does that mean Auntie Lena can come back now?"

Maya's heart stopped.

She stared at him, stunned.

He wasn't sad. He wasn't even asking her to stay. He was happy she was going. Because to him, it meant Lena could come back.

He had already replaced her.

Maya stood up slowly. She didn't know how to breathe.

All those bedtime stories, all those scraped knees she had kissed, all those hugs—did none of it matter?

She turned away, her hands gripping the suitcase tightly.

"Mama?" Jamie asked again, noticing her silence. "Are you mad at me?"

Maya forced a smile over her pain. "No, sweetheart. I'm not mad."

But she was. Not at him—but at everything else. At the lies. At the betrayal. At fate.

As she walked to the door, she heard his footsteps behind her.

"Wait! Mom! Will you come back?"

She paused, but didn't turn around. Her voice was barely a whisper.

"I don't know."

She stepped outside, shutting the door softly behind her.

Outside, the sky was cloudy. It looked like it was going to rain. She stood there for a second, clutching her suitcase, staring at the garden she had planted herself.

She remembered planting the roses during her first year of marriage. Daniel had laughed as she got dirt on her face. He said they would grow old together here. That was a lie too.

Just as she was about to walk down the steps, the door opened behind her.

"Maya!"

Daniel's voice stopped her.

She didn't want to see him. Not now. Not ever.

He ran to her side. "Please. Let's talk."

"There's nothing left to say," she replied coldly.

He reached for her arm, but she stepped back.

"You're leaving… just like that?" he asked, his voice cracking. "What about our son?"

Maya looked at him, her face pale with heartbreak. "You mean Lena's son?"

Daniel flinched. "You raised him. He still loves you."

"No," she said quietly. "He doesn't. He asked me if Lena could come back. He was happy I was leaving."

"He's just a child, Maya."

"No. He's a child who knows who his real mother is. And I… I've been living in a lie for years. You told me nothing. You let me love a child that wasn't mine. And when I collapsed from stress, you were outside the hospital room comforting her."

Daniel rubbed his forehead, sighing. "It wasn't supposed to happen this way."

"But it did," Maya snapped. "You let Lena stay in our house. You defended her every single time I had doubts. You never once stood by me."

"She didn't mean for this to happen either," he said, his voice softer now. "She didn't know the babies were swapped. Neither of us did."

"And what about my child?" Maya asked, her voice shaking. "Where is he? Do you even care that our real son is out there somewhere—alone?"

Daniel opened his mouth but didn't speak. That silence cut deeper than any words.

"I see," Maya whispered. "You don't."

"I've already hired people to search—"

She laughed bitterly. "That's not enough. You don't get it. I carried that baby for nine months. I felt every kick. I gave birth to him. And now he's gone. And the only thing you care about is keeping Lena comfortable."

Daniel's eyes filled with guilt. "I never meant to hurt you."

"But you did," Maya said. "And I can't stay here anymore. I can't pretend to be okay."

She turned around again and started walking. Daniel called after her, "Please! Don't do this. Let's fix this together."

She stopped at the gate and turned around one last time.

Then she walked away.

The rain started to fall as she got to the end of the street. Maya didn't stop. The tears on her cheeks mixed with the rain, but she kept moving.

She didn't know where she was going yet, but she knew one thing.

She was done being the woman who stayed quiet.

She was done being second to someone else.

From now on, she would fight to find her child. She would build a new life. One where no one made her feel like she didn't belong.

And she would never, ever forgive Daniel for letting her walk away so broken.

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