
Husband Loses All for Student
Chapter 3
The morning after the foundation meeting, I sat at my mahogany desk in the home office Rowan had never bothered to visit, drafting the most important letter of my marriage. My fountain pen felt heavier than usual as I wrote the formal heading: "Warren Family Foundation - Notice of Philanthropic Restructuring."
Dean Patricia Blackwell had always been cordial during university events, her sharp gray eyes assessing every donor with the precision of a surgeon evaluating an organ. Today, she would receive news that would require all her political skills to navigate.
"Dear Dean Blackwell," I wrote, my handwriting steady despite the magnitude of what I was doing. "After careful consideration, the Warren Family Foundation has decided to restructure our philanthropic priorities to focus on direct community impact rather than institutional support. Effective immediately, we will be discontinuing all donations to Westfield University, including the annual research grants, library funding, and departmental support that have totaled approximately three million dollars over the past three years."
I paused, remembering Rowan's dismissive words about my "petty jealousies" and "throwing money at charities." Let him see exactly what throwing money had bought him.
"We believe our resources can create more meaningful change through direct engagement with underserved communities," I continued. "We appreciate the university's past cooperation and wish you continued success in your fundraising endeavors."
I signed it with a flourish and sealed it in the foundation's official envelope. By tomorrow, Rowan's world would begin to crumble.
Two weeks later, I received an unexpected phone call from my assistant. "Mrs. Spencer, Dean Blackwell from Westfield University is on line one. She sounds... urgent."
I smiled, settling back in my chair. "Put her through."
"Adeline," Patricia's voice was strained, lacking its usual professional polish. "I received your letter. Surely we can discuss this? Perhaps there's been some misunderstanding?"
"No misunderstanding at all," I replied calmly. "The foundation is simply redirecting our focus."
"But the research department depends on your family's support. Professor Spencer's entire program—"
"Will need to find alternative funding," I finished smoothly. "I'm sure a scholar of my husband's caliber will have no trouble securing grants through his own merit."
The silence stretched between us. Finally, Patricia spoke again, her voice carefully controlled. "I see. Well, I hope you'll reconsider in the future."
After hanging up, I felt a strange lightness in my chest. For three years, I'd used my family's wealth to try to impress Rowan, to make myself valuable to his world. Now, I was discovering what it felt like to use that power for myself.
The real satisfaction came a month later when I made my first visit to Riverside Elementary, a rural school two hours outside the city. The foundation had been supporting their literacy program for years, but I'd never seen it firsthand—too busy attending university galas and faculty dinners, trying to fit into Rowan's academic circle.
Principal Emily Chen greeted me at the front entrance, her warm smile genuine in a way that made my chest tighten with unexpected emotion. "Mrs. Spencer, we're so honored you're here. The children have been practicing their thank-you presentations all week."
She led me through hallways lined with colorful artwork and handwritten letters. In the library, twenty-three third-graders sat cross-legged on a bright rug, their faces shining with excitement. Behind them, shelves overflowed with new books—books my donations had purchased.
"Thank you for our library!" they chorused, their voices high and sweet.
A little girl with pigtails stepped forward, clutching a handmade card. "I learned to read chapter books because of you," she said solemnly. "Now I can read to my baby brother."
I knelt down to accept the card, my throat tight. Inside, she'd drawn a picture of herself reading to a smaller figure, both of them smiling. "Thank you for helping me help him," it read in careful block letters.
For the first time in years, I felt truly useful. Not as someone's wife or benefactor, but as a person making a real difference in the world.
I spent the entire day at the school, reading with children, helping serve lunch, and listening to teachers describe how the foundation's support had transformed their programs. When I finally drove home as the sun set, my hands were dirty from the school garden and my heart was full in a way it hadn't been since before my marriage.
That evening, I found Rowan pacing in his study, his hair disheveled and his face flushed with anger.
"What did you do?" he demanded without preamble.
"I'm sorry?"
"The university, Adeline. They've restructured my position. I'm being moved from senior professor to regular instructor. They're cutting my research funding, my graduate student slots—" His voice cracked slightly. "They said budget constraints."
I removed my jacket slowly, hanging it on the back of a chair. "How unfortunate."
"Don't play innocent with me. This is about the foundation, isn't it? You withdrew our support to punish me."
"Our support?" I turned to face him fully. "I wasn't aware you'd contributed anything to those donations."
Rowan's face darkened. "That money came from our marriage, from our household—"
"That money came from my family," I corrected quietly. "And now it's going where it can do the most good."
He stared at me as if seeing me for the first time, and perhaps he was. The woman who had spent three years trying to earn his approval through strategic philanthropy was gone. In her place stood someone who had discovered her own purpose.
"You can't do this to me," he whispered.
I picked up the divorce papers from my desk, still unsigned on his end despite weeks of his dismissive confidence. "I already have."
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