I hadn’t spoken to Greg in almost fifteen years. Not since he packed a bag, told me he “needed more excitement,” and walked out of my life like our marriage had been a phase. The last I heard, he had married some woman nearly half his age, started a new life, and never looked back.
I won’t lie—it broke me. But I rebuilt. I found my own happiness, learned to stand on my own.
Then, last week, a thick envelope arrived in my mailbox. No return address. Just my name in a shaky, familiar scrawl.
Greg’s handwriting.
Inside was a letter. The words barely legible, like they’d been written by someone too weak to hold a pen properly. My hands trembled as I read the first line:
“By the time you get this, I’ll probably be gone. I know I don’t deserve it, but I need you to hear me out.”
I kept reading, my stomach twisting tighter with each sentence. He talked about regret. About how leaving me was the biggest mistake of his life. About how his new wife wasn’t what she seemed.
Then, near the end, he dropped something that made my breath hitch.
A secret. One he’d kept from me our entire marriage.
And as I read those last few lines, my whole world tilted.
Because if what he said was true—then everything I thought I knew about my own life was a lie.
The letter spilled out like a confession. Greg admitted he’d been diagnosed with terminal cancer months before he left. He’d kept it from me, terrified I’d lose myself to grief. “I couldn’t let you watch me die,” he wrote. “I thought I was saving you pain.”
But the truth was worse. He’d fled not for “excitement,” but because he’d believed he had weeks to live. He’d wanted to spend his final days alone, to spare me the emotional wreckage.
The younger woman, Mara , wasn’t his salvation. She was a nurse who’d taken advantage of his vulnerability. She’d seduced him, then convinced him to sign over his life savings for “medical care.” He’d realized too late she’d been scamming him, but by then, he was trapped in her lies.