
Ex-Husband's Vicious Lies
Chapter 2
The courthouse steps felt like they stretched endlessly upward, each one heavier than the last. I clutched my purse against my chest, the divorce papers folded inside like a secret I wasn't ready to share with the world. The morning air was crisp, but sweat dampened my palms as I pushed through the heavy glass doors.
The hallway echoed with footsteps and muffled conversations, lawyers in expensive suits brushing past me like I was invisible. I found the right courtroom and slipped inside, taking a seat in the back row. My hands trembled as I smoothed my skirt—the same navy dress I'd worn to our wedding two years ago. The irony wasn't lost on me.
Drake arrived with his lawyer, a sharp-faced woman in a tailored blazer who looked like she could cut glass with her stare. He didn't even glance in my direction, but I felt his presence like a weight pressing down on my chest. The man I'd loved, the man I'd sacrificed everything for, now sat across the aisle like a stranger.
"Mrs. Romero," his lawyer began when my turn came, her voice carrying across the courtroom like a blade. "Isn't it true that you've struggled with emotional instability throughout your marriage?"
I blinked, caught off guard. "I... no, that's not—"
"Your husband has documented several instances of erratic behavior. Obsessive cleaning, going through his personal belongings, making unfounded accusations about his fidelity."
Each word hit like a physical blow. I could feel the judge's eyes on me, weighing her words against my silence. My throat felt raw, but I forced myself to speak. "I found a letter. He was having an affair."
"A letter you claim to have found in the trash?" She raised an eyebrow, her tone dripping with skepticism. "How convenient."
The letter was in my purse, but suddenly it felt flimsy, inadequate. Just crumpled paper against Drake's calculated performance. I watched him sitting there, his face a mask of wounded innocence, and realized how thoroughly he'd prepared for this moment too.
The proceedings blurred together after that. Legal terms I didn't understand, forms that needed signing, a judge who looked at me with something between pity and impatience. When it was over, I stumbled out into the afternoon sunlight, officially divorced but feeling more lost than free.
Two days later, I was wiping down tables at Rosie's Café when she walked in. I recognized her immediately from the photos on Drake's phone—Emmy Gray, with her perfectly styled blonde hair and designer handbag that probably cost more than I made in three months.
She slid into a booth in my section, her red lips curving into a smile that made my stomach clench. "Olivia, isn't it? I'm Emmy. I think we should talk."
My hands stilled on the table I was cleaning. "I have nothing to say to you."
"Oh, but I have so much to say to you." She leaned back, her diamond bracelet catching the light as she gestured. "Drake told me all about you, you know. How desperately pathetic you were. How you'd do anything for his approval."
I set down my cleaning cloth, my fingers curling into fists. "You're the one who demanded he prove his loyalty by destroying someone else's life."
"Guilty as charged." She laughed, the sound bright and cruel. "But you made it so easy. Working those extra shifts, scrimping and saving for his fake debts. We used to laugh about it, you know. How you'd light up whenever he threw you the tiniest scrap of attention."
The café seemed to tilt around me. Other customers were staring now, but I couldn't move, couldn't breathe.
"He said you were like a lost puppy," Emmy continued, examining her manicured nails. "Always grateful for whatever crumbs he tossed your way. It was almost too easy to manipulate you."
"Stop." The word came out as a whisper.
"The funniest part? You actually thought he loved you. Even when he was texting me from your bed, planning our future together." She stood up, smoothing her designer dress. "Anyway, I just wanted to meet the woman who made it all possible. Thanks for the entertainment, Olivia. Drake and I had such fun watching you play the devoted wife."
She left a twenty on the table—more than enough for the coffee she hadn't ordered—and walked out, leaving me standing there with the weight of her words crushing down on me.
That evening, I sat in my lawyer's office, staring at the financial documents spread across his desk. Bank statements, property deeds, investment portfolios—all in Drake's name, all hidden from me throughout our marriage.
"Your ex-husband has been quite comfortable, Mrs. Turner," my lawyer said gently. "This account alone has over fifty thousand dollars. And this property in Bellevue—he's owned it for three years."
I traced my finger along the numbers, each digit a testament to my own blindness. While I'd been working double shifts and eating ramen for dinner, Drake had been living a completely different life. The struggling husband act had been just that—an act.
"The debts he claimed to have?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
"Nonexistent. At least, not in the way he described them to you."
I leaned back in the chair, feeling hollow. Every sacrifice, every worried night, every penny I'd scraped together—it had all been part of his game. The full scope of his deception stretched out before me like a map of my own foolishness, and I finally understood just how completely I'd been played.
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