After 20 years together, I left my ex-husband because he cheated on me.
Not long after, he married the woman he’d been seeing.
I moved on with my life, eventually had a daughter, and ignored the few texts he sent me over the years.
A few months later, he died in a car accident.
Out of the blue, I was contacted by his lawyer, who told me that he had left his entire $700,000 estate to me.
His wife was furious and demanded the money,
insisting it should go to her, but legally the will was clear.
Then the lawyer handed me a letter he had written before he died.
In it, he admitted that leaving me was the biggest mistake of his life.
He said he had tried to reach out, that he never stopped loving me,
and that the inheritance was his way of making sure I—and especially my daughter—would be taken care of.
Reading those words was overwhelming.
Part of me was angry, part of me was sad, and part of me just felt numb.
His wife tried to fight it, but the will stood.
In the end, I used the money to secure my daughter’s future.
It wasn’t about forgiveness, and it didn’t erase what he had done,
but his final act was a reminder that regret often comes too late.