My husband threw me out on the street after inheriting 75 million, believing I was a burden. Yet as the lawyer read the final clause, his triumphant smile turned into a face of panic.
We had been married for 10 years. 10 years in which I, Vanessa, had given everything I had. I wasn’t just a wife—I was his support, his shadow, and for the last three years, I was his father’s full-time nurse.
My father-in-law, Mr. Arthur, was a real estate tycoon, an iron man who built a $75 million empire from scratch. But cancer doesn’t respect bank accounts. When he fell ill, his son—my husband, Curtis—was too busy with his “important meetings,” his golf outings, and his friends who talked louder than they listened. He said watching his father wither away was “too depressing,” and that he needed to “protect his mindset.”
So I took charge..
I cleaned up Arthur’s vomit, listened to his war stories when the morphine made him hallucinate, read him the newspaper every morning, and held his hand when the fear of death gripped him in the early hours. Curtis would appear from time to time, impeccably dressed, to pat his father’s shoulder and ask, “Did he say anything about the will today?”
I didn’t want to see Curtis’s coldness. I loved him. Or so I thought. I told myself his distance was a defense mechanism. How naive I was.
The day Arthur d:ied, the world stopped for me. I had lost a father I’d learned to love. But for Curtis, it seemed as if the world had just begun. At the funeral, he wept—oh yes, he wept with Oscar-worthy elegance, dabbing his tears with a silk handkerchief while glancing sideways at his father’s business associates, calculating the value of the suits they were wearing.
Two days after the burial, the mask fell off.
I came home after taking care of the cemetery arrangements, exhausted, my eyes swollen. I found my suitcases in the entryway. They weren’t packed carefully—my clothes were crammed in, sleeves dangling, shoes scattered on the floor.
“Curtis?” I called, confused.
He came downstairs. He wasn’t in mourning. He wore a crisp shirt, expensive watch, and held a glass of champagne. He looked radiant—and terrifying.
—Vanessa, sweetheart—he said, his voice dripping with sweet poison—I think it’s time for you to go your own way.
“What are you talking about?” I asked, dropping my keys.
“I’m talking about my father’s death. The old man’s finally at rest.” He took a sip from his glass. “And that means I’m the sole heir. Seventy-five million dollars, Vanessa. Do you have any idea what that means?”
“It means we have an enormous responsibility…” I began to say.
He let out a sharp laugh that echoed in the empty foyer.
“We?” No, Vanessa. There is no “we.” You were useful when Dad needed someone to change his diapers. You were a good free nurse. But now… now you’re a burden. You’re a simple woman, without ambition, without class. You don’t fit into my new life as a single millionaire.
I froze. The words hit me harder than any punch.
—Curtis, I am your wife. I took care of your father because I loved him… and because I loved you.
“And I thank you for that,” he said, pulling a check from his pocket and tossing it into the air. The paper fluttered down at my feet. “Here’s ten thousand dollars. Consider it your payment for services rendered. Now, go. I want you out of my house before my lawyer arrives. I’m remodeling everything. It smells old… and you.”
I tried to protest. I tried to appeal to his heart, to those ten years of memories. But he had already called security. They escorted me out of my own house, in the rain, while he watched from the second-floor landing, finishing his champagne.
That night I slept in my car in the parking lot of a 24-hour supermarket. I felt broken, humiliated, and above all, utterly useless. Had I wasted a decade of my life with a monster? The man I loved didn’t exist. There was only a predator waiting for his prey.
Three weeks passed. Three weeks in which I looked for a cheap apartment, tried to rebuild my life, and received the divorce papers. He wanted to get it over with quickly. He wanted to erase me so he could enjoy his millions without any “burdens.”