My kids cheered as my wife slammed divorce papers onto the top of my retirement cake. I signed them, stood up, and within minutes, she was the one begging me not to leave.

My kids cheered as my wife slammed divorce papers onto the top of my retirement cake. I signed them, stood up, and within minutes, she was the one begging me not to leave.

Catherine slammed a manila envelope onto the white frosting of my retirement cake just as my son and daughter set off confetti cannons by the dance floor.

For a suspended moment, the banquet hall froze. Blue and silver paper drifted lazily through the air. A woman at table six raised her phone higher, determined not to miss a second of my humiliation. Then the room erupted in applause.

There I stood at sixty-seven, holding a glass of warm champagne in one hand, watching the woman I had supported for forty years beam at me as though presenting a trophy.

The party was at the Harbor View Ballroom in Stamford, Connecticut, one of those glossy waterfront hotels that always smell faintly of lemon polish and overworked air-conditioning. If the evening were truly about me, the room would have been filled with the people who had built Bennett Logistics alongside me over four decades—the dispatch managers from Newark, warehouse supervisors from Bridgeport, old drivers from New Jersey who still called me Larry and slapped my shoulder hard enough to rattle my teeth.

For illustration purposes only
None of them were there.

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