
Wife Ends Marriage Battle
Chapter 2
I discovered Dorothy in my bedroom at three in the afternoon, standing before my open safe with my vintage Tiffany brooch gleaming in her weathered hands.
"What are you doing?" The words came out sharper than I intended, but finding someone rifling through my most precious possessions tends to have that effect.
She didn't even have the grace to look embarrassed. "Just admiring this pretty little thing. Stephen said you kept all your valuables locked up like Fort Knox." She held the brooch up to the light streaming through our bedroom windows. "Must be worth a fortune, all those diamonds and sapphires."
"It's not about the monetary value." I stepped closer, extending my hand. "That brooch belonged to my grandmother, and before that, her mother. It was personally gifted to our family by—"
"By some fancy politician, I heard." Dorothy's grip tightened on the piece. "Margaret something-or-other. The First Lady who thought your daddy was so special." Her tone dripped with mockery. "Seems like a shame to keep something this beautiful locked away where nobody can see it."
My chest tightened. "Because it's irreplaceable. It represents five generations of Armstrong women who served their country with honor."
"Honey, it's just jewelry." She pinned it to her polyester blouse—a garish floral print that made the elegant piece look like a costume accessory. "There. Now it's doing some good instead of collecting dust."
I felt my father's training kick in—assess the threat, control the response, choose your battles wisely. "Dorothy, I need you to give that back. Now."
"Or what?" She tilted her head, studying my reflection in the mirror. "You'll tell Stephen? My boy knows where his loyalty lies, and it ain't with some uppity woman who thinks she's better than his own mother."
For the next week, I watched Dorothy parade around our penthouse wearing my family's legacy like a trophy. She wore it to the grocery store, to her afternoon soap operas, even to bed. Each time I saw it pinned to her inappropriate outfits, something inside me cracked a little more.
When Stephen finally came home early enough for a real conversation, I cornered him in his study.
"Your mother has been wearing my brooch for a week," I said without preamble. "The one Margaret Whitfield personally blessed before my father's final deployment."
Stephen barely looked up from his legal briefs. "She mentioned you were upset about some jewelry."
"Some jewelry?" I closed his file folder, forcing him to meet my eyes. "Stephen, that brooch is the last tangible connection I have to my father. It represents everything the Armstrong family stood for—duty, honor, sacrifice. Margaret Whitfield held it in her hands and told me it would always remind me of my father's courage."
"You're being dramatic, Finley." He leaned back in his leather chair, that condescending smile playing at his lips. "It's a piece of metal and stones. Your father's memory doesn't live in some trinket."
The casual dismissal hit me like a physical blow. "You don't understand—"
"I understand you're being materialistic." His voice took on that lecturing tone he used with junior associates. "My mother spent her whole life with nothing, watching me study by kerosene light because we couldn't afford electricity. Now she's finally somewhere beautiful, and you're worried about her wearing a brooch?"
"This isn't about money or status—"
"Isn't it?" He stood, straightening his Harvard tie. "You've never been able to accept that I come from humble beginnings. Now you can't stand that my mother is enjoying the same luxuries you've always taken for granted."
I stared at him, this man I'd married, this stranger who couldn't see past his own insecurities to understand what he was destroying. "You think this is about class?"
"I think this is about you needing to feel superior." He moved toward the door. "Get over it, Finley. It's just jewelry."
The explosion came three days later during what should have been a simple discussion about household expenses. Dorothy had been rearranging my kitchen again, this time throwing away spices I'd carefully selected from a specialty shop.
"These fancy herbs are a waste of money," she declared, tossing my saffron into the garbage. "Salt and pepper work just fine for real cooking."
"Those spices cost more than most people spend on groceries in a month," I said, retrieving the container. "Please don't throw away my things without asking."
"Your things, your house, your precious brooch." She whirled around, her face flushed with rage. "I'm sick to death of walking on eggshells around Princess Finley and her fancy Armstrong rules."
"I've never asked you to walk on eggshells. I've asked for basic respect—"
"Respect?" She laughed bitterly, her hand going to the brooch pinned to her chest. "You want to know what I think of your precious family respect?"
Before I could react, she yanked the brooch from her blouse and hurled it against our marble fireplace with all her strength.
The sound of shattering metal and breaking stones echoed through our penthouse like gunfire. Diamonds scattered across the floor. The sapphire centerpiece—the one Margaret Whitfield had touched while blessing my father's memory—lay cracked in two.
I dropped to my knees, gathering the pieces with shaking hands. "You destroyed it," I whispered, my voice breaking. "You destroyed the last piece of my father."
"Good," Dorothy spat. "Maybe now you'll stop acting like you're better than everyone else because of some dead soldier's trinket."
I heard Stephen's key in the lock, heard his footsteps approaching. When he appeared in the doorway, I looked up at him from the floor where I knelt among the ruins of my heritage.
"It was an accident," Dorothy said quickly. "I was just admiring it and it slipped."
Stephen surveyed the scene—his mother standing defiant, his wife on her knees clutching broken metal and scattered gems.
"These things happen," he said finally. "Insurance will cover it."
In that moment, kneeling on our cold marble floor with my father's memory literally shattered around me, I felt the last of my illusions about this marriage crumble to dust.
The war was no longer coming. It had arrived.
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