
On the night of March 8, Jakarta glowed brightly.
From Menteng to South Jakarta, couples walked hand in hand, carrying flowers and small gifts for the women they loved.
But in a quiet apartment on the edge of the city, one woman sat alone — Clara Mendoza, 32 years old.

Beside her was a dining table gone cold — a bowl of soto ayam and a plate of rendang she had spent all afternoon preparing for her husband, Adrian.
She had sent their six-year-old son to her mother’s house in Depok, hoping for a peaceful, private evening together.
She wore the red dress Adrian had given her on their anniversary and sprayed his favorite jasmine perfume on her wrists.
In her mind, she imagined him walking through the door, smiling, saying: “Happy Women’s Day, my love.”
But it remained only a dream.
At 7 p.m., her phone rang.
Adrian’s voice came through — hurried, distracted, unfamiliar.
“Honey, I’m sorry. Something came up. An urgent meeting with a client. I won’t make it home on time. Eat first, okay?”
Clara paused for a moment before answering softly, “Alright… just don’t stay too late.”
“Yeah, I know,” he said, and hung up.
No flowers. No greeting. No message after that.
Her chest tightened — that quiet ache only a wife’s intuition could explain.
It wasn’t the first time Adrian had been “busy” on a special night.
Her eyes wandered to the wedding photo on the wall — two smiling faces once full of dreams. Now, only she remained, surrounded by the silence of a love slowly fading.

8 p.m. passed. Then 9 p.m.
Still no sign of him.
The apartment grew dim. The candle she had lit flickered weakly… then went out.
Just then, her phone buzzed.
A message — from an unknown number.
Her heart pounded as she opened it with trembling fingers:
“Your husband is at the motel with me.
He said he’s tired of his ‘boring wife at home.’
If you don’t believe me, come to the Taman Sari Hotel, room 307.”
Attached was a photo.
Adrian, her husband, sat on a bed, arms around a young woman, both drunk. Red light flooded their faces — the kind of light that belongs to places of betrayal, not love.
Clara’s hands shook violently.
The phone slipped from her fingers, crashing to the floor, its screen cracking.
She snatched it up again and dialed his number.

Once. Twice.
No answer.
She kept calling. Three times. Five. Ten.
By the thirtieth call, the cold operator’s voice replied: “The number you dialed cannot be reached at this time.”
Her heart clenched as if pierced by glass.
Throwing on her coat, she grabbed her car keys and rushed into the street.
Jakarta was still alive — couples laughing, holding roses, music spilling from bars.
As she drove, tears blurred her vision. She whispered through sobs, “Adrian… why would you do this to me?”
As she turned onto Sudirman Avenue, the glare of a truck’s headlights hit her eyes.
Her vision clouded. Her grip loosened on the steering wheel.
Then — “BAM!”
A deafening crash echoed through the night.
Her motorcycle skidded. Clara was thrown onto the wet asphalt.
Bl00d streamed down her forehead, mixing with rainwater and the yellow glow of the streetlights.
Pain surged through her body — but none greater than what she felt inside.
With trembling hands, she reached for her phone.
She managed to unlock the screen and type one final message:
“Adrian… it hurts… help me…”
Then the phone slipped from her grasp.
The screen went dark.
The light in her eyes faded.

6 a.m.
Inside a small hotel room on Taman Sari Road, Adrian stirred awake.
His head throbbed from the alcohol.
Beside him, his mistress, Kyla, lay fast asleep.
He reached for his phone — it had been off all night, intentionally.
When he turned it on, notifications flooded the screen.
30 missed calls from “Wife .” Several from his mother-in-law. Dozens of messages.
The last one froze him in place: “Adrian… it hurts… help me…”
A moment later, a new message appeared — from an unknown number: “The owner of this phone was in a serious accident and is being treated at Jakarta General Hospital. Family members, please come immediately.”
Adrian bolted upright as if struck by lightning.
He threw on his clothes and sprinted out of the hotel like a madman.
When he reached the hospital, Clara’s parents were already there — pale, trembling, devastated.
Her father, usually a gentle man, walked up and slapped him hard across the face.
“You don’t deserve to call yourself my daughter’s husband!”
Adrian couldn’t speak. He could only lower his head.
Through the window of the emergency room, he saw Clara lying motionless on a white bed, her head wrapped in gauze, a ventilator humming beside her.
The doctor came out, voice heavy.
“Severe head trauma. Internal bleeding. We’ve done everything we can. Now… it depends on her strength — and a miracle.”
Adrian’s knees buckled.

He remembered the ignored calls. The cold dinner she had prepared. The countless nights he’d claimed to be “working late.”
Each memory stabbed deeper, cutting through the remnants of his pride.
He fell to the floor, sobbing, his voice breaking:
“Clara… I’m sorry… please wake up… please…”
But the room stayed silent.
No one answered.
Thirty missed calls. One final message.
The only proof left of a love he had taken for granted.
And in that silence, Adrian realized the cruelest truth of all — the woman who had waited for him all night, with food gone cold and hope still warm —
was the most precious thing he had lost forever.
Because sometimes, the message we don’t answer… becomes the last one we ever receive.
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