My wife abruptly ended our two-decade marriage, leaving just a bottle of floor cleaner and a note behind.

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I came home anticipating my wife’s warm smile and a delicious dinner, but instead, I discovered a bottle of floor cleaner accompanied by a note that shattered two decades of my life. She had ended our 20-year marriage overnight, but the true shock came with her explanation. Two decades together had taught me the rhythms of our life—like the soft gurgle of the coffee maker at 6:30 a.m., the quiet click of the front door when I left for work, and the soothing sound of Elise’s voice sharing her day when I returned.

But that night, things felt off. As I stepped through the front door, silence enveloped me. There was no music from her painting studio, no aroma of dinner wafting through the air… and no Elise.

“Honey? Are you home?”

The silence was stifling, pressing against my ears like cotton. Our home seemed larger and lonelier than ever.

I walked through the house, my footsteps echoing louder than my racing heart. When I reached the bedroom, the stark reality hit me. Elise’s closet stood wide open, empty hangers swaying slightly in the air conditioning.

Every drawer was cleared out. Her jewelry box was missing, as was her toothbrush from our bathroom. The life we’d built together had vanished in what felt like mere hours.

As I rushed from the bedroom, something caught my eye: a bottle of floor cleaner placed conspicuously on our dining table. It was unusual; Elise was always so organized. A yellow sticky note was affixed to it.

With my hands shaking slightly, I picked up the bottle. The note bore Elise’s neat handwriting, eight words that sent my stomach plummeting:

“Keep it shiny for the next one! Goodbye!”

“What does this mean?

Elise?” I shouted again. “This isn’t a joke!”

I grabbed my phone and called her, but it went straight to voicemail. “Elise, please, what’s happening?

Just… call me back. Please.”

Next, I tried her sister, Caroline, who answered on the third ring. “I know she’s been planning this, Johnny.

She made me promise not to tell you.”

“Planning? For how long?”

“Three months. Maybe longer.”

“And you didn’t think to give me a heads up?”

“She’s my sister, Johnny.

What was I supposed to do?”

I disconnected, my hands trembling. Three months? She had been orchestrating her departure while we shared a bed, meals, and discussed our future?

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