My Ex-Wife
This all happened two years ago. My work assignment was drawing to a close, and I was preparing to head home to Shrewsbury. After buying my train ticket, I realised I still had three hours to spare, so I set off to wander about the city one last time before my departure. Thats when a woman approached me on the pavementsomeone I recognised in an instant.
It was my first wife, Ruth. We had parted ways twelve years back. She looked almost unchanged, save for a certain paleness in her face. The shock of that chance encounter was clear in her eyesa mirror to my own bewilderment.
I had loved Ruth deeply, painfully. My jealousy was suffocating, clinging, and because of that, Id driven her away. I was so possessive that I couldnt stand her having relationships with anyonenot even her own mother. If she was late coming home, my chest would tighten, panic would rise, and Id be convinced some disaster had befallen.
Eventually, Ruth left me, exhausted by my endless questionswhere shed been, who shed seen, and why. I remember coming home from work one day, a tiny spaniel puppy hidden inside my coat, hoping to cheer her up. But the flat was empty, and on the kitchen table lay a note.
She wrote that she had to go, even though she still loved me. My suspicions had tormented her to breaking point. She begged forgiveness and pleaded with me not to try and find her
And now, after all those years, I found myself face-to-face with her as if fate was playing a cruel trick during a simple business trip. We talked for a long time, the hours slipping by until I realised with a start that I was in danger of missing my train to Shrewsbury.
At last, I forced myself to say, “I’m sorry, Ruth, but I have to go. My trains leaving soon and I cant miss it.”
Then Ruth turned to me, her eyes earnest and pleading. Tom, could you do me one last favour? I know youre in a hurry, but for the sake of the good times we shared, please, dont refuse me. Walk with me to an office nearbyits important and I cant manage it alone.
Of course, I agreed, though I warned, We have to make it quick! Ruth led me into a rather grand old building, and we wound our way for what felt like only fifteen minutes, though time seemed strangely suspended. We climbed stairs, crossed corridors. Children and elderly folks went past us, chatting, laughing. Looking back, I should have wondered what families with toddlers or pensioners would be doing in an old city administrative building at that hour, but all my attention was on Ruth.
At some point, she stopped before a door, turned, and looked at me with a final, haunting sadness. Isnt it strange? I could neither be with you nor without you.
She stepped inside, closing the door softly behind her. I lingered, expecting her to return, wanting to ask what she meant by those words. But the seconds dragged. She never came back.
Suddenly, as if waking from a trance, I realised I’d lost all sense of urgencymy train was leaving at any moment! In a panic, I looked around and was chilled to the bone. The once-grand building was now a derelict shell. Windows gaped black and empty. There were no staircases left, just collapsed beams, treacherous planks bridging the drop.
With trembling steps, I made my way out. By the time I reached the station, Id missed my train by a good hour and had no choice but to fork out for another ticket.
While waiting in the queue, a station official announced the news: the train I missed had derailed at the river bend outside town. No one survived.
A fortnight later, I found myself hesitating outside my former mother-in-laws door. Using a local records office, Id tracked down Mrs. Margaret Thornton to her quiet cottage. She received me gently, but her words cut deepRuth had died eleven years ago, barely a year after our divorce.
I refused to accept it, convinced Margaret was just protecting her daughter from my notorious jealousy. But when I asked to see Ruths grave, she surprised me by agreeing.
Two hours later, I stood before the gravestone, staring at the gentle, smiling face of the woman Id loved so ruinously. It was unmistakable in the portrait engraved into the marble. The woman who, in some inexplicable way, had returned to save my life on that dayand then vanished from it once more.












