Daughter Exposed Her Father’s Betrayal at Graduation-felicia

Exactly one hundred and twenty hours after my diagnosis, my husband decided he was done being my husband.

Not scared.

Not overwhelmed.

Image

Done.

The doctor at Riverside Medical Center had used careful words, the kind people use when they are trying not to crack open another person’s life too fast.

Aggressive illness.

Treatment plan.

Immediate oncology referral.

He spoke while the paper beneath me crinkled and the fluorescent light hummed above the exam room.

Daniel sat beside me with his arms crossed.

He did not ask one question.

I remember noticing that before I noticed anything else.

The doctor asked if we had support at home, and I almost laughed because I still believed Daniel was my support.

Twenty-two years of marriage teaches you to assume certain things.

You assume the person who stood beside you at the altar will stand beside you in the oncology wing.

You assume the man who held your hand through labor will hold your hand through a biopsy.

You assume the savings account with both names on it belongs to both lives.

Five days later, those assumptions died at my dining room table.

Daniel came home wearing the gray suit he used for client meetings.

His shoes were polished.

His hair was neat.

He placed his phone facedown beside his water glass, as if this were a negotiation and not a murder of everything we had built.

Then he slid a thick manila envelope across the table.

The paper made a dry scraping sound against the wood.

The room smelled faintly of lemon cleaner, dish soap, and cold coffee.

Read More