He insisted the business had been part of our marriage. That his support had made it possible. That a judge would see my refusal as greed.
He wasn’t fighting for love.
He was fighting for money.
The divorce became brutal.
His legal team demanded half the sale proceeds, arguing that the length of the marriage transformed my company into marital property.
Patricia dismantled them with records spanning decades—tax returns, incorporation documents, account histories, evidence showing the business had always remained separate.
And though Oregon was technically no-fault, Michael’s affair with a much younger subordinate helped destroy the saintly image his lawyers wanted to present. Hotel bills paid with marital funds, lavish dinners, deception stretching back eighteen months—it all mattered.
While the case advanced, I left the Maple Street house for good.
I bought a modern condominium overlooking the Willamette River. Clean lines. White walls. No ghosts.
Then I took the New Zealand trip alone.
I hiked in the wind. I drank wine under enormous skies. I cried until my body gave out, and then I kept walking until the betrayed wife in me began to loosen her grip.