The truth spilled out eventually—affairs, plural. Each time I found out, he begged for forgiveness. I wanted to believe him. I was in love, and I thought love could fix it. We tried therapy. I tried patience. But then he missed our daughter Lacey’s seventh birthday. No call. No message. Nothing. While I was wiping cake off the floor, my best friend Mia sent me a photo she found on Instagram. Jake, grinning in a bar, arm around his coworker in a red dress. The caption read: “Work hard, play harder.”
When he came home, I didn’t even yell. I showed him the photo, let him lie one last time, and when he finally confessed, I told him to pack a bag and leave. I sent the kids to Mia’s so they wouldn’t hear the fight. That night, I didn’t cry. I was just done.
The divorce was nasty. He fought for the house, the car, the kids—not because he cared, but because he wanted to win. He demanded full custody even though he barely knew which grade our son Ben was in. He even tried to claim the car seat because he “paid for it.” In the end, I kept the house, the kids, and the old sedan. He walked away with the air fryer and his precious leather recliner. It felt like a fair trade.
Six months passed. I pieced our life back together. Couponing, tutoring gigs, stretching meals, late nights—whatever it took. And even though we didn’t have much, our home was full of laughter again. What surprised me most was that Jake’s parents, especially his dad, Ron, stayed in the picture. Ron was nothing like his son—gentle, grounded, and good. He never picked sides. Just showed up, brought snacks, and told silly stories about raccoons to the kids.