Adrian ignored my calls. He didn’t show up when the ceiling started leaking, when my mom was hospitalized, or when my dad’s heart condition worsened. In all that time, he sent me only one message:
“Stop overreacting. You’ll be fine.”
After that, my parents passed away in a car crash on their way home from visiting my aunt in another city. In a single night, I lost the only two people who had ever loved me without conditions.
The next morning, my father’s attorney, Mr. Delgado, told me that their home, their savings, a small rental property, and a life insurance policy—worth more than 25 million dollars—had all been left to me.
I was still dressed in black from the funeral when Adrian came back.
He didn’t knock. He used the key he had refused to return and walked into my parents’ house like it belonged to him. His clothes were wrinkled, his expression cold, and he carried the scent of perfume that wasn’t mine.
Behind him stood Vanessa, the woman he had chosen over me, leaning casually against the porch railing with her arms crossed, like she had come to watch a performance.
Adrian tossed a folder onto the dining table.
“You’re going to sign this,” he said.
I looked down. The documents would give him access to my inheritance accounts and allow him to sell the rental property my father had spent twenty years paying off.
Quietly, I said, “No.”
His expression darkened.
For years, Adrian had trained me to shrink myself—to speak softly, to apologize first, to accept blame just to keep peace. When he raised his voice, I froze. When he insulted me, I swallowed it. When he left, I blamed myself.
But that night, grief had burned something inside me clean.
He grabbed my hair and jerked my head back.
“You’re still my wife,” he hissed. “Everything you have belongs to me.”
Pain shot through my scalp. My lip struck the edge of the table, and I tasted blood.
Vanessa laughed from the doorway.
Adrian leaned closer. “Sign the papers, Isabella.”
I met his eyes and smiled through the blood.
“Touch me again,” I whispered, “and I’ll show everyone exactly who you are.”
He laughed.
Then I grabbed my father’s heavy glass paperweight and slammed it down onto his wrist.
Adrian screamed, loud enough that Vanessa stopped laughing.
He staggered back, clutching his arm, shock written all over his face. I had never hit him before. Not once. For seven years, he had mistaken my silence for weakness. He thought obedience defined me. He thought fear was love.
He was wrong.
“Are you insane?” he shouted.
I stood slowly, still shaking, still bleeding, but no longer afraid in the same way. The paperweight remained in my hand, slick against my palm.
“No,” I said. “I’m finished.”
Adrian lunged at me again, but this time I was ready. I stepped aside, and he crashed into the dining table, knocking over the vase my mother used to fill with yellow roses every Sunday. It shattered across the floor.
That sound hurt more than anything he had done.
I grabbed my phone from the cabinet and hit record.
Adrian saw it and froze.
“Put that down,” he said.