Part 1
“You married my son just to stop smelling like the gutter,” my mother-in-law sneered in front of the entire family, and I requested a divorce without a single second of hesitation.
The dining room fell into a suffocating silence where nobody dared to take a breath.
Not my husband, Tyler. Not his sister, Brielle, who always wore a smug grin whenever I was being torn down.
Not even the patriarch, Mr. Harrison, who merely swirled his scotch as if the verbal assault had nothing to do with him.
Only Mrs. Cordelia remained standing tall at the head of the table, wearing the satisfied expression of a woman who believed she had finally crushed an insect.
We were at their estate in Greenwich, a sprawling colonial manor filled with antique rugs and oil paintings they flaunted like sacred relics of their bloodline.
I had spent three grueling years at that table, enduring insults disguised as witty banter and silences that felt like physical blows.
But that afternoon, the last thread of my patience finally snapped.
Tyler set his silverware down and, without even looking me in the eye, spoke with a voice like ice.