Working Too Hard

“I think you’ve been working too hard,” the wife said gently one evening. “Maybe instead of going to the office, you should take a few days off. Pack a suitcase. Go stay with a friend and clear your head.”

Her husband barely hesitated. The idea sounded far too good to ignore before it disappeared. Within minutes, he was out of bed, fully dressed, tossing clothes into a travel bag like a man afraid the offer might be revoked.

“Just curious,” he said while zipping the suitcase, “what made you decide I need a break?”

“You were talking about work in your sleep all night,” she replied.

He paused. “Really? How do you know it was about work?”

She didn’t look up. “Because every two minutes, you were telling your secretary to go faster.”

They had been married for 37 years.

Then Jerald left Catherine—for that same secretary.

The divorce was ugly and drawn out, with lawyers circling like vultures over decades of shared assets. Jerald’s new girlfriend insisted that he keep their multimillion-dollar home so she could move in. Catherine, despite having built her entire adult life there, was told to leave.

She was given three days.

Three days to pack up 37 years of memories, furniture, photographs, and quiet routines. The movers wouldn’t arrive until the end, so Catherine was alone in the house, moving from room to room with boxes and suitcases, each one heavier than the last in ways that had nothing to do with weight.

On her final evening there, she decided to do something she hadn’t done in years. She cooked herself an indulgent meal—shrimp, caviar, and a chilled glass of white wine. She ate slowly at the table, savoring every bite, letting the silence settle.And then she had an idea.

Catherine walked through every room of the house with deliberate care. From the living room to the bedrooms, she gently removed the curtain rods. One by one, she stuffed caviar-dipped shrimp shells inside them, sliding the rods back into place as if nothing had changed.When she was finished, she cleaned the kitchen, washed her glass, closed the door behind her, and left the house for good.

Jerald moved in with his girlfriend almost immediately. At first, everything seemed perfect. Then, about a week later, the smell started.

It was faint at first—easy to ignore. Then it grew stronger. Heavier. Unavoidable.

They scrubbed every surface. They cleaned the drains. They replaced the carpets. They hired professionals. Nothing worked. The smell lingered, seeping into every room, every piece of furniture, every breath.

After a month, they gave up.

They decided to sell the house.

No one would buy it. Potential buyers took one step inside and turned right back around. Eventually, even the real estate agent stopped trying.

Desperate, Jerald called Catherine.

He knew she had loved that house. He offered to sell it back to her for a tenth of its original price.

Catherine accepted without hesitation.

She had only one condition.

They had one week to move out.

Everything had to go.

Including the curtain rods.

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