I always believed my husband loved me, despite the tension with my MIL. But one night he told me, “Mom is dying, and her last wish is our divorce.” I was furious, with three kids at home, unsure what to do. He had to pay, so before he left I smiled and said, “Then let’s make her final days unforgettable.”
I don’t think he expected me to agree so quickly.
But something in me snapped. Maybe it was the years of biting my tongue every time she called me “not good enough.” Or the Christmas dinner when she gifted me wrinkle cream and told me to “keep up” with her son. Or maybe it was the way my husband, Adrian, never defended me—not once.
He looked confused. “You’re… okay with this?”
I nodded and put on my best calm voice. “If that’s what your mother wants, how can I say no?”
That night, while he packed a bag and called his sister to share the “good news,” I poured myself a glass of wine and made a plan.
This wasn’t going to break me. It was going to wake me up. The next morning, I got up early, made the kids breakfast, kissed their little foreheads, and told them Daddy would be “staying with Grandma for a while.” They didn’t ask many questions—honestly, Adrian was barely home lately anyway.
Then I called a lawyer. Not a cheap one, not a timid one. I wanted someone who understood exactly what was at stake and wasn’t afraid to play a little hardball.
And let me tell you, divorce lawyers? They’ve seen it all. Mine, a sharp woman named Tania, listened patiently, then asked just one thing: “Do you want to win?”
I didn’t even blink.
“I want to live again.”
By week two, Adrian started sending polite texts like “Can we keep this civil?” and “Let’s not ruin the kids’ lives.” As if I was the one doing that. I ignored them. Then the bomb dropped.
I found out he had been seeing someone else. Her name was Mirela. She was 32, worked in digital marketing, and—according to her Instagram—had a thing for “soft mornings and strong men.” Adrian was in three of her photos.
One at a cabin, one at a beach resort, and one in front of a sushi place I had begged him to take me to for two years. I didn’t cry. I didn’t scream.
I just scrolled and took screenshots. When I confronted him, he didn’t even deny it. “It just happened,” he muttered.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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