One morning, my husband Jack — who never called in sick — stayed home, pale and quiet. When I opened our front door, I was shocked to find a life-sized clay statue of him, perfectly detailed. Without a word, Jack dragged it inside. Underneath, my son found a crumpled note that would soon reveal everything.
The note read: “Jack, I’m returning the statue I made while believing you loved me. Finding out you’ve been married for ten years destroyed me. You owe me $10,000… or your wife sees every message. This is your only warning. — Sally.” Heart racing, I smiled for the kids, dropped them at school, and drove straight to a divorce lawyer.
That night, while Jack slept, I checked his open laptop — and there it was: a trove of emails and love notes to Sally. He had lied to both of us. I contacted her, and she confirmed everything. Furious but determined, I gathered the evidence for court.
A month later, with Sally’s testimony and the messages in hand, I won the case — the house, full custody, and Jack was ordered to repay her. When he tried to apologize, I calmly told him: “You didn’t mean to hurt me. You meant for me never to find out.”