Because the truth is, none of this began with a torn blouse.
That was just the moment I stopped pretending everything was fine.
The next morning, I sat across from my lawyer in Hartford. Her name was Rachel Bennett—calm, precise, and ruthless when it came to details.
“Clean wins come from documentation, not emotion,” she once told me.
And I had documentation.
I gave her everything.
The video.
Months of messages.
Internal reports on Daniel’s declining performance.
Because for nearly a year, he had been coasting.
Missed deadlines. Ignored warnings. Hired unqualified friends. And worse—shared confidential company information with his mother like it was casual conversation.
I had confronted him before.
He apologized.
Changed—for a week.
Then slipped right back.
Our marriage had become one-sided.
Built on my work.
And his assumptions.
“And the house?” Rachel asked.
“Mine. Purchased before the marriage.”
“Boston property?”
“Also mine.”
“Investments?”
“Protected.”
She nodded.
“Then he’s not ruined,” she said. “He’s just losing comfort.”
Exactly.
I wasn’t destroying him.
I was reclaiming what was mine.
By noon, HR finalized his termination—for cause.
Not personal.
Professional.