“I’m not fixing something I didn’t break,” I said.
That night, Lucas packed his things. Evelyn called me every name imaginable.
I changed the locks the next morning.
The divorce was swift.
Once finances were reviewed, the facts were clear. Lucas had contributed nothing—no payments, no repairs, no legal claim. Marriage alone didn’t entitle him to ownership.
Evelyn tried everything—pleading, threats, even offering forgiveness if I transferred half the property. I blocked her.
Lucas came once, standing outside the building, saying he felt betrayed.
Through the intercom, I replied, “You didn’t love me. You loved what you thought I owned.”
Then I hung up.
Peace returned slowly.
I repainted the walls. Rearranged the furniture. Added plants. For the first time since the wedding, the apartment felt like mine again—not just on paper, but in my body.