
Jake’s bedroom door was slightly open. I could see the glow-in-the-dark stars on his ceiling.
I suddenly felt like an outsider in my own marriage.

Now the house is officially listed. Strangers are scheduled to walk through it this weekend. Thomas has already spoken to a lawyer about separating finances. He says the proceeds from the sale will go directly toward treatment.
And me?
I’m scrambling to look at rental apartments I can barely afford on my own.
I keep replaying his words: You will end up begging me.
Is this what he meant? That I would beg him not to sell? Beg him not to dismantle our life?
Or did he mean something else—that one day I would need him more than he needs me?
I don’t know what hurts more: the fear of losing my home… or the realization that when forced to choose, my husband chose his son without hesitation—and I wasn’t even part of the equation.
I understand that a parent will do anything for their child. I truly do.
But does that justify putting me on the brink of homelessness?
Was I wrong to protect what I earned?
Or is he wrong for weaponizing the only asset he has?
Right now, I feel lost—caught between compassion and self-preservation, between marriage vows and personal boundaries.
And as the For Sale sign goes up in our tiny front yard, I can’t help but wonder:
Is this the price of love when loyalty is tested?
Or is this the moment I finally see the truth about the man I married?