I used to think meeting Jason was fate. Life was stable—good job, cozy Brooklyn apartment, and my sweet five-year-old son, Jamie.
When Jason came along, he was charming and down on his luck. I let him move in.
He treated Jamie kindly. At first. I helped him land a job, and soon he had a car, confidence, and a ring.
“You don’t need to work anymore,” he said. “Focus on Jamie.
I’ll take care of us.” I believed him. But things changed. He criticized Jamie, money vanished,
and excuses piled up. I picked up night shifts to keep us afloat.
One night, driving for a rideshare app, I picked up a couple. Jason.
With another woman.
They didn’t recognize me. “I missed you,” he whispered to her.
“As soon as Abby gets her inheritance, I’m out.” Abby. Me. I stayed quiet, drove them to a house he’d claimed was “for business,” and dropped him off.
“Thanks, buddy,” he said, handing me cash. Game on. I waited until Saturday—our anniversary. He claimed a “business trip.” Instead,
Jamie and I crashed Ashley’s backyard party. Her parents were there.
Jason’s face turned ghost white. “Happy anniversary,”
I smiled, handing him my wedding ring. “Jamie wanted ice cream.”
“Daddy!” Jamie chirped. Ashley’s mom gasped.
Ashley’s dad demanded answers. I gave them all. Three months later,
Jason showed up in court—alone. Ashley’s parents testified. I won custody, the apartment, the savings, even the car.Now,
Jamie and I live in a peaceful place by the water. My mom moved in.
We’re safe. We’re happy.And peace? That’s something Jason could never fake.