The first lie your husband tells that week is smooth, patient, almost gentle.
He sits across from you at the kitchen table you restored yourself—the same place where your three-year-old happily colors dinosaurs in impossible shades—and claims his company is collapsing. Creditors, lawsuits, disaster… unless you act quickly, everything will be lost.
You stay quiet at the right moments, letting him mistake your silence for submission. Men like Aaron Medina need to feel in control.
“There’s one way out,” he says.
You already know what’s coming—you’ve heard him rehearse it with his mistress. Still, hearing it in your home, with your child nearby and dinner cooking, hardens something inside you.
“If we divorce now,” he explains, “they can’t touch you or Eli. I’m doing this to protect you.”
He takes your hand, dressing betrayal as sacrifice. You let him, because sometimes survival means pretending to trust.
“What happens to us?” you ask softly.
“It’s temporary,” he says. “Once things are fixed, we’ll figure it out. But if you love me, you need to sign.”
That phrase once worked on you. Now it sounds empty.
You nod, pretending hesitation. “I need a little time.”
That night, after he falls asleep, you call your mother. You confirm everything—his words match the recording exactly. She tells you to let him keep thinking you’re blind.
