8 months pregnant, I entered court expecting only a painful divorce. Instead, my CEO husband and his mistress mocked and assaulted me openly—until the judge met my eyes. His voice trembled as he ordered the courtroom sealed, and everything suddenly changed.
When I stepped into Family Court that morning, moving slower than I ever had in my life, my body heavy with eight months of pregnancy and exhaustion that no amount of sleep could fix, I truly believed I was prepared for the worst, because I had already rehearsed it in my mind a hundred times during sleepless nights on borrowed couches, telling myself that humiliation was survivable, that paperwork was temporary, that signing my name and walking away would at least buy me peace, even if it cost me everything else.
I was wrong.
The air inside the courthouse felt colder than outside, sterile and indifferent, the kind of chill that settles into your bones when you realize no one here knows your story and most of them don’t care, and as I waddled forward with one hand braced against my lower back and the other gripping a manila folder stuffed with medical bills, ultrasound reports, and messages I had never dared submit as evidence, I reminded myself over and over that I wasn’t here to fight, only to finish.
Divorce. That was the word I kept repeating.
Divorce, not betrayal.
Divorce, not abuse.
Divorce, not survival.
I took my seat at the respondent’s table alone, because my attorney had been delayed by a sudden rescheduling request filed late the night before by my husband’s legal team, a move so perfectly timed it felt intentional, though I still hadn’t fully accepted how calculated my life had become under his control, and I focused on breathing through the tightening in my chest as the courtroom doors opened again.
That was when I saw him.
Marcus Vale.
8 months pregnant, I entered court expecting only a painful divorce. Instead, my CEO husband and his mistress mocked and assaulted me openly—until the judge met my eyes. His voice trembled as he ordered the courtroom sealed, and everything suddenly changed.
Tears spilled freely then, not from shame, but from relief.
Outside, cameras flashed, Marcus’s downfall already beginning, but for the first time in years, I wasn’t afraid of being seen.
The Lesson