He told her he can live off you for as long as he wants without lifting a finger.”
My brain refused to process the betrayal at first.
Craig, my devoted, charming husband, pretending to be broken? The man I’d been killing myself to care for?
“Are you sure?” I whispered.
Emily nodded, tears in her eyes. “I’m so sorry.
I didn’t know what to do.”
I asked Emily to keep the secret and show up as usual the next morning. What else could I do? I needed time to think, to plan.
I tucked the information in my heart like a live grenade and kissed Craig’s forehead that night as if nothing had changed.
He winced and moaned about phantom pain, completely unaware that I was already plotting his downfall.
That night, I lay awake staring at the ceiling, listening to Craig’s peaceful breathing beside me.
How long had he been lying?
I left for work the next morning, but returned the moment Emily texted me that she’d just gone out for her lunch break. I parked two blocks away and crept toward our house.
I saw him through the kitchen window, standing tall, phone in one hand, coffee mug cradled in the other, crutches nowhere in sight.
I crept closer. Through the open window, his voice carried clearly.
“It’s like a vacation, Mom,” Craig was saying, and I could hear Sharon’s delighted laughter through the speaker.
“She’s covering everything, even the nurse. I’m not lifting a finger till at least Christmas! Maybe longer if I play it right.”
“You always were my clever boy,” Sharon cooed.
My phone camera caught every second of his fraud.
I called a lawyer and a locksmith during the walk back to my car.
Funny how quickly you can dismantle a marriage when you put your mind to it.
“This counts as marital deception,” the lawyer said. “With that video, we can make sure he doesn’t walk away with anything extra.”
That evening, I returned home to the familiar sight of Craig in bed, face twisted in his well-practiced expression of agony.
He looked up at me with the same tender look that had captivated me at that birthday party years ago.
“How was your day, honey?” he asked. “Mine was rough.
The pain was really bad.”
I stood at the foot of our bed, looking at this stranger I’d married.
“I know everything.” I held out the divorce papers. “You can walk yourself out.”
The color drained from his face like someone had pulled a plug. He opened his mouth, closed it, and opened it again.
“You misunderstood whatever you think you know,” he stammered.
“I was just—”
“Faking it, and gloating to your mom about fooling me. Like I said, Craig. I know everything.” I shook out the trash bag I’d grabbed in the kitchen and started dumping his clothes into it.
“Now, I suggest you call Mommy to pick you up, before I call the cops to escort you out.”
He moved into Sharon’s spare room. For weeks afterward, he called and sent texts begging me for a second chance.
I ignored them all.
Emily stayed on as my tenant instead of a nurse. Her rent helped cover the legal fees, a small silver lining in the mess Craig left behind.
She turned out to be an excellent roommate, much better company than my lying husband had ever been.
Source: amomama

