That was when Ethan told me he wanted a divorce—casually, over dinner, as if he were choosing dessert.
By that point, he had already moved into a condo downtown. He had already “restructured” his finances. He had already crafted the narrative: I was emotional, ungrateful, and fortunate he was willing to leave me anything at all.
And he felt completely safe behind the prenuptial agreement.
The prenup was real. We signed it three weeks before our wedding. I still remembered sitting in a sterile conference room with stale coffee and stacks of paperwork. Ethan’s lawyer slid the documents across the table like I was merely completing a form.
I was twenty-nine, newly promoted at work, and in love with a man who praised my independence—right up until the moment it challenged him.
Ethan called it “just business.”
Lorraine called it “just smart.”
I signed because I believed marriage meant we were partners.
What Ethan never realized was that the first time he called me “replaceable,” something shifted inside me.
After that, I started keeping records. Quietly.
Not out of revenge—at least not at first.