On the seventh year of our anniversary, the anniversary gift my husband, Anthony Walker, has given me is a divorce agreement that is valid for seven days.
He has planned all this just because he has his eye on a female intern in his company, who is seven years younger than him. So, he wants to be in a legitimate relationship with her that only lasts for seven days.
On the first day, they reserve an entire cinema for themselves. After that, they make love to each other from the doorway to the seats.
On the second day, they set off fireworks at the beach. The fireworks are so bright that half of the city is illuminated by them.
On the fifth day, the intern, Tanya Lindt, barges into my art exhibition. With tears running down her face, she accuses me of being the side chick in her relationship in front of the mass media.
That night, news of a rising female painter becoming a homewrecker for the sake of love goes viral. More than 100 thousand malicious comments directed at me are posted in the comment section.
On the sixth day, Anthony apologizes to me on Tanya's behalf. Apparently, the punishment he has set for her is that she's not allowed to go shopping for three days.
On the seventh day, Anthony finally realizes that something is wrong. He calls me 99 times just to remind me that we'll get remarried the next day.
"Okay," I say to him. Then, I inform my assistant to check in my baggage.
What Anthony doesn't know is that I already came up with a plan to further my studies overseas seven days ago.
This time, I'm not going to waste my time on him anymore.
When Anthony Walker came to me with a divorce agreement, I was holed up in my studio at home, finishing a surprise for our seventh anniversary. It was an 86-by-55-inch oil painting I'd been working on for a month. I was down to the last two strokes.
"I'm leaving the divorce agreement here. If everything looks fine, sign it. Tanya's waiting for me at the door," he said.
My hand froze mid-stroke. I thought I'd misheard him. "What?"
Anthony frowned. "I'm divorcing you, but relax—it's only for seven days. After that, you'll still be my one and only wife."
The absurdity slammed into me so hard I could barely breathe. I opened my mouth to say something, but he didn't give me the chance.
"The day we got married, you promised to give me one chance to make a mistake. You're not going back on your word, are you?"
I had said that. However, I'd also said it didn't include cheating or falling out of love.
My chest ached like it was splitting open, but I clenched my teeth and tried to keep my dignity. "Does it have to be today?"
It was a stormy day, and it was our anniversary. Seven years ago, in weather just like this, Anthony had stepped into my world under a deep blue umbrella. I still remembered the smell of rain soaking into the ground and how the sixth rib of his umbrella had a spot of rust right in the middle.
Anthony clicked his tongue and shut the window, looking irritated. "Am I not being clear enough, Giselle? I'm not actually trying to leave you. I'm just doing this to please Tanya a bit. Once her birthday is over next week, I'll remarry you right away."
Someone knocked on the door. A young woman in a petal-print dress poked her head in. "Anthony, are you ready? Our movie's about to start."
It was Tanya Lindt. She pouted, and her full cheeks puffed out. She looked sweet, even when she was pretending to be mad.
"Alright, alright, princess. Give me another minute." Anthony ruffled her hair indulgently, then turned back to me. His expression instantly morphed into annoyance. "Do you see this? I've got things to do. Sign the agreement."
I dipped my brush in paint and asked again, quietly, "Does it have to be today?"
He paused for a few seconds, then laughed. "Seriously? Since when do you need to pick a date to get divorced?"
This time, I didn't argue. I picked up the pen and signed.
Anthony cleared the doorway just as I laid down the final stroke of my painting.
"Anthony," I called, making him stop. "Do you know that today is our seventh wedding anniversary?"
He said coolly, "I know. But Tanya is rushing me, and I don't want her to be upset."
The door slammed shut, but I still heard their voices carry down the hall.
One said, "Man, I hate this rain. My dress is ruined."
The other agreed. "Yeah. Damn this rain."
My fingers tightened around the brush until my knuckles turned pale. I dipped it in paint out of habit, then realized I had nowhere else to paint. If Anthony had just taken two more steps forward, he would've seen that I was painting the moment we first met.
After a quiet beat, I tore open the black paint in the corner and dumped it over the canvas. One bucket, two buckets, three buckets…
I kept going until every outline disappeared. Then, I pressed the divorce papers onto the paint. In small white letters, I added a note. "I won't remarry you, Anthony."
…
That night, Anthony didn't come home. He only sent me a quick message. "I'll stay at Tanya's place for the next seven days. Don't wait up. I'll see you at City Hall at 9:00 am on the seventh day."
Before I could reply, I saw that Tanya had rushed to share a photo on her social media of their fingers laced together. "He's divorced and my seven-day exclusive."
In the photo, Anthony was not wearing his wedding ring. Aside from a faint band that didn't quite match the rest of his skin, there was no visible proof that we'd even been in love.
It was only then that I realized I was divorced. I raised my hand to take off my ring, too, but the band that slipped on perfectly seven years ago was now jammed tight at the knuckle. No matter what I did, it wouldn't budge.
Maybe I should just give up, I thought. It was just a ring. It didn't mean anything.
However, a second later, Tanya sent me a photo. The wedding ring that had disappeared from Anthony's hand was now snug on the paw of her toy poodle. Almost as if she were worried I'd miss the details, she shot 13 photos from different angles, each captioned with a smiling emoji.
She wrapped up her taunt with a message. "Giselle, Anthony says that he's going all in since he's putting on an act. So, for these seven days, you'll have to be married to my dog."
She included a heart emoji at the end.
My face hardened. I immediately called the jeweler who made our rings. Whatever it took, the ring had to come off tomorrow.
The following day, the staff from the jewelry store came to help remove the ring. Emma Bronson, my usually bubbly assistant, was oddly hesitant.
"What is it?" I asked.
She pressed her lips together and said carefully, "Mrs. Walker, I received a hotel charge under Mr. Walker's name at Livern Hotel. He booked a luxury couple's suite and a whole truckload of roses. The note says they're for Tanya Lindt."
I didn't say anything, not because I was hurt, but because I suddenly remembered something. Anthony had once done the same thing for me and given me roses. 9,999 in total, to be exact. There'd been so many of them that I couldn't hold them with both arms.
He'd said, "If one rose is one promise of love, I'm giving you 9,999 promises. You'll never have to envy anyone."
It turned out a man could use the same trick twice.
The villa door suddenly swung open. Anthony came in, and his neck was marked with hickeys. When he saw the people in the living room, he tossed out a casual question. "Why are there so many people here?"
I didn't even look up. "They're from the jewelry store. They're removing my ring."
He froze. "We're getting remarried in six days. Why bother taking it off?"
"What about you? Didn't you already take yours off?" I asked in return.
He fumbled at that, looking a little guilty. Then, he quickly grew angry. "You're so dramatic."
With that, he stormed upstairs and shouted for the housekeeper to pack his things.
Emma whispered that Anthony kept wandering back and forth upstairs, occasionally stopping and glancing in my direction.
I smiled, not thinking much of it.
Ten minutes later, the staff gave me a verdict. "Miss, the ring is too tight. We really can't get it off. If you really want it off, we'd have to cut it with a tool. But since you're a painter, I'd suggest that you don't take that risk."
I froze. Then, I said, "Go ahead and cut it."
"You can't!" Unexpectedly, Anthony snapped. He came running down from upstairs so fast that he nearly stumbled and fell. "I won't let you cut the ring, Giselle!"
His outburst startled everyone, especially Emma. Since she started working with me, this was the first time she'd seen Anthony lose his composure.
"Mr. Walker?" she mumbled.
He caught himself and cleared his throat. "I'm just worried you'll hurt your hand. If you do, you won't be able to paint, and then you'll cry to me about it. That's annoying."
Then, something seemed to occur to him. He arched a brow at me. "Where's the painting you did for me yesterday? I have time to look at it now."
"I burned it," I said evenly, lowering my gaze.
He was stunned. "What did you say? How could you burn it?"
He stormed toward me, ready to argue, when his phone suddenly lit up. He'd received a few voice messages from his guys' group chat.
"Anthony, I heard you got divorced. You had big news like that, and you didn't tell us? Are we still friends or what?"
"Yeah, man. Why didn't you let us celebrate the big occasion with you?"
"We've all seen your new girlfriend. She's definitely young and sweet, unlike Giselle. Didn't you say she was like a dead fish in bed? You should be satisfied now, right?"
Their jeering cut through the room.
Anthony panicked and fumbled to silence his phone. He stammered, "Giselle, it's not what you think. They don't know the divorce is fake. They're just talking nonsense."
I gave a low hum, then calmly pushed him and his luggage out the door. For the first time, I saw him completely at a loss.
The door shut. The silence hung heavy, especially over Emma. Her eyes were even redder than mine. "Mrs. Walker… no, Giselle…"
I gave her a reassuring smile, only then noticing the slight chill on my face from my tears. I turned to the staff from the jewelry store and said, "Help me cut the ring off."
…
For the next few days, Anthony was too embarrassed to come home. Strangely enough, he didn't stop sending me gifts.
The emerald bracelet I'd once liked on social media, the couture dress I'd casually mentioned, and even a private mountain villa in Jorvain I'd always wanted but thought was too much trouble to buy…
Each gift came with a careful little note.
"Five days until we remarry."
"Four days until we remarry."
"Three days until we remarry."
The gift on the second-to-last day was a sapphire brooch I'd seen on Tanya's feed. It was called "Beloved".
My first reaction was that Anthony had sent it to the wrong person. And I was right.
At my last art exhibition before going abroad, Tanya burst onto the stage in front of the media. "Giselle, please give 'Beloved' back to me! Anthony gave it to me as a token of our love. He said he'll only ever love me. I can give you anything else, but not this. I'm begging you—don't take away the gift my boyfriend gave me!"
She cried prettily, but her sharp nails dug deep into my forearm.
Pain shot through me. I instinctively tried to pull back, and she dropped to the floor with the movement. She clutched her chest, gasping that it hurt.
Before I could even process what was happening, Anthony barreled into the venue. His temper flared at the sight of Tanya's swollen, tearful eyes.
"Tanya, are you okay? Giselle Townsend, couldn't you have taken your anger out on me? Why did you pick on an innocent young woman? No wonder my mom called you vulgar back then. She was absolutely right!"