I got home from a nine-day work trip, and the house felt wrong the second I stepped inside. My phone kept buzzing, my stomach kept dropping, and by the time I reached the kitchen counter, I realized my marriage wasn’t just cracking. It was already gone.
My phone buzzed the second the plane hit the runway. David’s name filled my screen.
The text wasn’t “welcome home.” It was a victory lap.
Every extra dollar was supposed to go toward IVF.
“I’m headed to Hawaii with the most beautiful woman in the world—enjoy being alone with no money! We took your savings and everything in the house that mattered. You can keep the bare walls.”
I stared until my eyes watered. I’d been away for nine days, working overtime and skipping anything unnecessary because every extra dollar was supposed to go toward IVF.
I didn’t answer him. I didn’t give him the satisfaction of my panic on a screen.
I drove straight home, and when I opened the door, the house felt like a shell. The lock looked like someone had tried to force it open with a tool.
The sight of the bedroom hit me like a punch.
The living room was stripped down to bare walls and carpet marks. No couch, no TV, no rug, not even the lamp David always defended like it was art.
No chairs, no coffee maker, no little messes that prove people live somewhere. I walked down the hall slowly, like my brain was refusing to catch up.
My footsteps echoed, and the echo made me feel small. I kept moving anyway.
The sight of the bedroom hit me like a punch. Dresser drawers were yanked out and left crooked.
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