I spent years trying to save my marriage, believing that if I just held on long enough, things would get better. I never imagined how quickly everything I fought for could be turned against me.
I, Melissa, cleared my husband Aidan’s $300,000 debt three weeks before everything fell apart.
It took years to get there, with me believing I was helping him, and ultimately us. I worked extra shifts, sold what I could, and cut back on everything unnecessary. I kept telling myself it was temporary.
That once it was over, we’d finally have some peace.
It took years to get there.
The day I made the final payment, I sat at the kitchen table staring at the confirmation email. My hands were shaking, but I felt lighter.
When Aidan returned that evening, I excitedly told him the debt was completely gone.
But then he looked at me and said, “Well, FINALLY you did it! I’m divorcing you. I’m so SICK of you!”
I waited for something else, for him to take it back, or at least explain, but he didn’t.
“I’m so SICK of you!”
Instead, he walked past me, grabbed a suitcase, and started packing.
“Are you serious?” I asked.
“I’ve been serious for a long time,” he said without looking at me.
That same night, he left.
***
By morning, I found out through a mutual friend that Aidan had moved in with a woman. I assumed she was his mistress because of how quickly he’d left me.
While I was still trying to process all that, a legal notice arrived two days later.
“Are you serious?”
My husband wasn’t just asking for a divorce; he wanted everything.
The house we bought together. The family car. Even the jewelry he’d once given me as gifts. Things I hadn’t thought twice about because they were part of our life together.
And then I read the part that made my chest tighten.
Aidan wanted full custody of our son, Howard.
That didn’t make sense.
He wanted everything.
My husband hadn’t been present for a long time. He was always “busy.” Always somewhere else.
Then, suddenly, he wanted to take Howard?
I sat down and realized something I hadn’t allowed myself to see before.
Aidan hadn’t just left; he’d planned the whole thing while I worked my fingers raw trying to pay his debt to, hopefully, save our marriage.
Most of my savings were gone. I had used them to fix what he had gotten us into.
He was always “busy.”
***
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