
Justice for the Family
Chapter 2
The morning after our confrontation, Michael left for work without a word. The silence in our house felt oppressive, broken only by Leo's occasional coughing from the couch. I'd managed to download some cartoons onto my old laptop for him, a poor substitute for the TV his father had so callously taken away.
"Mommy, when's my doctor 'pointment?" Leo asked, his voice still raspy.
I smoothed his hair back from his forehead. "Tomorrow morning, sweetheart. The medicine is helping, but we need to make sure your lungs are getting better."
He nodded solemnly, eyes already drifting back to the small screen. The sight of my son—so small against the pile of pillows, so accepting of his father's cruelty—made something twist painfully in my chest.
After making sure Leo was comfortable, I headed to our cramped home office to gather his medical paperwork. The pediatrician would need his insurance information, and I needed to organize the growing stack of bills from his emergency visit. My hands trembled slightly as I sorted through the papers. Another past-due notice had arrived yesterday—our third this month.
I sank into the desk chair, the weight of our financial situation pressing down on me. Michael's captain's salary should have been more than enough for us to live comfortably, yet somehow we were always struggling. The constant refrain of "budget cuts" and "unexpected expenses" had become Michael's mantra whenever I questioned where the money went.
Opening the filing cabinet, I searched for our insurance card. It wasn't in its usual folder. I rifled through Michael's desk drawers, growing increasingly frustrated until I noticed something odd about the bottom drawer—it seemed shallower inside than it should be.
Pressing my fingers along the edges, I felt a small gap. My heart raced as I carefully pried up what turned out to be a false bottom, revealing a hidden compartment beneath.
There, neatly organized in a manila folder, were bank statements. Dozens of them, spanning the last three years. With shaking hands, I pulled them out and spread them across the desk.
The first page hit me like a physical blow. A transfer—$3,200 to an account under Amanda Rivers' name. The next statement showed the same. And the next. Month after month, nearly his entire salary, directly deposited into her account.
My vision blurred as tears welled up. All those nights I'd spent calculating how to stretch our grocery budget. All those times I'd sewn patches on Leo's clothes instead of buying new ones. All those arguments about why we couldn't afford his asthma medication.
It had all been a lie.
The room seemed to tilt around me as I flipped through statement after statement. Some months, he'd left us less than $800 to live on. Eight hundred dollars for rent, utilities, food, and a growing child's needs on an Army base where everything was overpriced.
My hands stopped trembling. A strange calm settled over me as the pieces clicked into place—the mysterious weekend trips, the constant excuses, the way he'd always take calls from her in another room. This wasn't just emotional betrayal. This was calculated financial abuse.
I reached for my phone and methodically photographed each statement, making sure the dates and amounts were clearly visible. Then I carefully returned everything exactly as I'd found it, replacing the false bottom and closing the drawer.
Walking to our bedroom, I unlocked my jewelry box—the one place Michael never looked—and slipped the memory card from my phone inside. Then I went to check on Leo, who had finally fallen asleep, his breathing still labored but steadier than before.
I stood watching my son's chest rise and fall, something hardening inside me with each breath. The woman who had endured years of gaslighting and neglect was dissolving, leaving someone stronger and colder in her place.
"This ends now," I whispered, the promise settling into my bones like steel.
I didn't know exactly how yet, but as I looked at my sleeping child—sick because his father had prioritized another woman over his own son's health—I knew with absolute certainty that Michael Mitchell would regret ever underestimating me.
The evidence was secured. The truth was undeniable.
And I was done being a victim.
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