I thought Collins was the one. He was gentle, thoughtful, and remembered small things like my sick cat or my favorite tea.
After a year of dating, he proposed, and I moved into the house he shared with his mother, Jenna.
That’s when things changed.
Chore lists replaced affection, and I became the unpaid maid.
Collins stopped helping, and Jenna began treating me like live-in staff.
I thought it was temporary until it became the new normal.
Then I got injured at work. Torn ligament. Six weeks off my feet. Collins said he’d take care of me
. The first day, he and Jenna carried me upstairs, fluffed pillows, handed me water and locked the bedroom door from the outside.
I was stunned. Minutes later, a paper slid under the door: a
“Home Contribution Agreement” demanding I cook, clean, and pay rent once recovered
. Their signatures were on it. Mine was missing but they left me a pen.
What they didn’t know? I had a backup plan. I’d hidden a spare key behind the headboard months ago.
I unlocked the door, grabbed my phone, and called my sister.
When police arrived, I handed them the contract and my medical papers.
Collins and Jenna tried to spin it but the truth was clear
. I left that night and never looked back.
A week later, I filed for divorce. Collins tried to fight it, but my brother-in-law who’s a lawyer buried him in evidence.
He lost the case, and his job. Jenna got evicted.
When I saw Collins at the pharmacy weeks later, he said,
“You ruined my life.” I smiled. “No I just finally chose mine.”