
Confronting the Ruin My Ex Caused
Chapter 1
The cold kitchen tiles pressed against my cheek as I lay sprawled across the floor, my vision swimming with black spots. How long had I been here? Minutes? Hours? The hunger had become a living thing inside me, clawing at my stomach walls, making rational thought nearly impossible.
Three days without a proper meal. Three days of rationing the last packet of saltine crackers I'd found in the back of our pantry. Three days since I'd checked our joint account to find it drained—again.
With trembling fingers, I reached for my phone that had clattered to the floor beside me. The screen was cracked from the fall, spiderwebbing across Michael's smiling face in our wedding photo wallpaper. How fitting.
"Please," I whispered as I dialed his number, hating the desperation in my voice. "Please pick up."
He answered on the fourth ring. "What is it, Sarah? I'm in the middle of something important."
I could hear soft female laughter in the background. Amanda. Always Amanda.
"Michael, I—" My voice cracked. "I need some money for groceries. I haven't eaten in days. The card was declined again, and I—"
"Jesus, Sarah." His voice dripped with disdain. "You know Amanda's family cut her off. We're sharing her pain. Why should you live in comfort when she's suffering?"
"But I'm your wife," I whispered, the words sounding hollow even to my own ears.
"And you're becoming a burden." The coldness in his tone made me flinch. "Fine. I'll send you something. But this is the last time."
The call ended. I lay there, too weak to move, too broken to cry.
My phone pinged with a notification. A Venmo transfer from Michael: $1.00.
The message attached read: "Stop being a burden. Amanda needs me more."
One dollar. After ten years of marriage, I was worth one dollar to him.
Something snapped inside me. A dam breaking, releasing not tears but a cold, clarifying rage. I pushed myself up from the floor, ignoring the dizziness that threatened to topple me again. One step at a time, I made my way to Michael's home office.
He never let me in here. It was his private sanctuary, locked with a key he thought I didn't know about. But after a decade of picking up after him, of washing his clothes and cleaning his spaces, I knew where he hid everything.
The small brass key was taped under his desk drawer, just where it always was. With shaking hands, I unlocked the bottom filing cabinet.
I wasn't sure what I was looking for—perhaps proof that we weren't as financially strained as he claimed, perhaps just something to sell for food money. What I found instead were receipts. Dozens of them, neatly organized by date.
Hermès. Tiffany. Cartier. Hundreds of thousands of dollars in luxury purchases, all made within the last two months—all since Amanda had reappeared in our lives.
My fingers froze on a Hermès receipt for $50,000. A custom Birkin bag. The date stamped on it was the same day Michael had cut off my grocery allowance, claiming we needed to "tighten our belts."
I sank into his leather chair, the receipts spread before me like evidence at a crime scene. Which is exactly what this was—the methodical murder of our marriage.
I thought of all the nights I'd gone to bed hungry. Of the bill collectors calling. Of the electricity being shut off last week while Michael was "working late." All while he showered Amanda with gifts that cost more than what most people made in a year.
The tears wouldn't come. Instead, a strange calm settled over me. I gathered the receipts and returned to our bedroom—the room we had once shared before he started spending his nights elsewhere.
That night, I packed a single suitcase with essentials. My clothes. My toiletries. The art portfolio I'd abandoned when Michael convinced me my "hobby" was worthless. I took nothing he had given me.
At the door, I paused. The weight of my wedding ring felt suddenly unbearable, like a shackle rather than a symbol of love. I slipped it off and placed it on the counter beside his untouched coffee mug.
As the first light of dawn broke over Manhattan, I stepped out of the apartment and closed the door behind me. For the first time in days, despite the hunger and uncertainty, I could breathe again.
I was worth more than one dollar. And it was time I remembered that.
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