When I married Jake, I believed we shared the same dreams. He worked from home, and I did everything I could to support him — managing the household, caring for our two children, and even working part-time to help with bills. I thought I was helping us build a future. But one day, I found out what he was really doing behind that locked door — and everything changed.
Jake often said he was “working on something big.” He locked himself away in his home office for hours, claiming he had nonstop virtual meetings and important deadlines. I adjusted our entire household to accommodate this. I tried to keep the kids quiet and time my chores so as not to disturb his focus.
We were constantly stretched thin. Despite his claimed hard work, our bills were late, and our savings barely existed. Still, I believed in him — until the day I found out the truth.
It happened on a Wednesday. The kids were home from school, which meant more noise and energy than usual. As I cleaned the kitchen and tried to maintain some order, Tyler, our youngest, dashed through the room chasing our dog. The noise startled me, and I accidentally dropped a pan with a loud clatter.
Jake stormed out of his office, visibly upset. “Can you *please* keep it down?” he snapped. “I’m in an important meeting!”
I apologized, feeling awful, but then I heard something strange — a voice, light and cheerful, coming from inside his office. It didn’t sound like a meeting.
“Who’s in there?” I asked, trying to remain calm.
Jake looked flustered. “Just a client,” he mumbled, stepping in front of the door. But something didn’t feel right. I walked past him and looked at the computer screen.
It wasn’t spreadsheets or a presentation. It was a brightly colored online game. In the corner was a video call — not with a colleague, but with an animated avatar labeled **”SuzyLovely88″**, who giggled and waved onscreen.
My heart sank.
“What is this?” I asked quietly.
Jake hesitated, then said, “It’s just a hobby. I need an escape. Suzy understands me. She’s easy to talk to.”
His words hit me harder than I expected. I had supported him, rearranged our lives around him — and this is what he’d been doing? I stood there, stunned.
“I’ve been doing everything I can for our family,” I said, my voice breaking. “You told me you were working. And now I find out you’ve been spending your days playing games and chatting online?”
Jake didn’t respond kindly. He said things that stung, shifting blame and brushing off my pain. Then, in a moment of anger, he grabbed a duffel bag, packed, and left. He said he was going to find “Suzy,” who made him feel appreciated.
The next day, I was still processing everything when his mother called me. Her voice was shaking.
“Sweetheart,” she said gently, “Jake’s in shock. He drove to meet this ‘Suzy’ person… but it turned out to be someone completely different than he expected.”
I frowned. “What do you mean?”
“She wasn’t real. It was someone pretending to be someone else. They’d been messaging for months, and Jake even sent them money. He’s devastated.”
I sat in stunned silence, then found myself laughing. Not out of cruelty, but because the weight of it all finally cracked. All the pressure, the deception, the stress — it suddenly felt absurd.
Jake eventually reached out, asking to come home. But I had made up my mind.
“No,” I told him. “I’ve carried this family while you hid behind a screen. I’m choosing a better life for me and the kids.”
I filed for divorce. He didn’t fight it.
In the weeks that followed, I found a full-time job. I enrolled the kids in daycare. It was hard, but it felt like I was finally living honestly, without the strain of false promises.
One evening, as I tucked Tyler into bed, he looked up at me with wide eyes. “Mommy,” he asked, “are we going to be okay?”
I smiled, brushing his hair back. “Yes, sweetheart. We’re going to be more than okay.”
And for the first time in years, I knew that was true.