I Tried to Leave My Cheating Husband, but His Mother Threatened Me With Something That Could Take My Kids Away

I Tried to Leave My Cheating Husband, but His Mother Threatened Me With Something That Could Take My Kids Away

I finally had the courage to leave my unfaithful spouse, assuming the worst was over. Just as I started rebuilding my life, his mother—who always secretly supported his c.r.u.elty—threatens me. Her argument was that she had something that might ruin me and take my children away forever.

Women lose part of their soul when they forgive betrayals. This fact was hard to grasp, like witnessing a spark within me flicker and die.

Grace, mother to Jonah, eight, and Ava, five, My existence revolves on them, giving every weary morning and restless night meaning. I’ve always packed lunches, read bedtime tales, bandaged knees, and absorbed every tear. Their father, Darren, always arrived broken.

He constantly “working late,” citing deadlines and negotiations and coming home with weary eyes and borrowed perfume. I tried trusting him. I really desired a family for my kids. Then I discovered the writings.

Sexy emojis. Late-night texts. “Mark from Sales”—Michelle, and not the only one. My world shifted. I was numb and furious. So I informed him I wanted a divorce.

He didn’t argue. Didn’t beg. He shrugged and mumbled, “If that’s what you want.”

Not Darren, but his mother, Judith, surprised me.

No, Judith never liked me. She treated me like her son’s mistake from the moment we met. I was questioned on every parenting decision. Her grin was mismatched as she gave unwanted advise. But I never believed she’d threaten to ruin me.

Things escalated swiftly when I informed Darren I was divorcing.

After the kids went to bed, I entered the living room and saw Darren sitting on the sofa with a remote, watching a basketball game.

“I spoke to the lawyer today,” I said. “Papers will be ready next week.”

He ignored me. Failed to blink.

He eventually said, “You think you’re just going to walk out with the kids?”

Staring at him, I was shocked. “You talking about what? I reared them. You scarcely appear.”

He grinned dryly. “See what the court says.”

A cold rushed through me. That was my first inkling that he wouldn’t let go. Not merely leaving a horrible marriage. Walking toward conflict.

Judith reached out.

Friday, she contacted me about seeing the kids. My usual response is no. I distrusted her. However, I was drained physically and emotionally and thought keeping things cordial may make the divorce go smoothly. I agreed grudgingly.

At two, she came smiling with a tote bag of “treats.” She held the kids too long and stared at me as she added, “I brought something sweet for my little angels.”

I added, “We don’t do sweets during the week, Judith,” imposing rules.

Waving her hand. “Come on. It’s Friday. They deserve some joy.”

I couldn’t determine whether her comments were arrogant or cautionary. I returned to the kitchen to breathe.

I sliced carrots as the kids played in the living room. Cartoons and Ava’s laughter filled the air. It seemed doable at first.

Then I heard foil crinkling.

“Yay! Chocolate!” Ava shrieked.

My stomach sank.

I hurried to the living room and found her on the floor with chocolate on her hands and lips.

“Ava!” I snapped. “No!”

She jumped, shocked. My grandmother said it was OK.

I stole her chocolate and read the label. Blood chilled.

Peanut butter.

My kid has severe peanut allergy.

I squatted before her, heart racing. How much did you eat?

“Just a bite,” she whispered.

Shaking hands, I hurried for the emergency kit. I spoke reassurances while holding her shaking body and giving her a chewable antihistamine.

“You’ll be fine, sweetheart. The mother is here. You’re fine.”

Judith relaxed against the doorframe.

“She looks fine,” she replied frankly.

Fury filled me as I faced her. “You gave her this? Knowing she’s allergic?”

“She didn’t say.”

“She’s five,” I said. Nobody should make her! You knew. You knew years ago.”

Not denied by Judith. That arrogant smirk flickered as she gazed.

I rocked Ava softly. I monitored her respiration every 2 seconds. Thank goodness no symptoms appeared immediately. But there was more.

After the kids went to bed, I took Judith to the door.

“You planned this,” I whispered.

Her gaze remained calm. “You’re divorcing Darren wrong.”

“No. Fixing one.”

She clutched her handbag. “Reconsider it. If you don’t… I have something to make sure you never see your kids again.”

I fixated on her.

She took her phone from her handbag and tapped it.

She showed me a video.

I was from earlier that day. Screaming at Ava to stop eating chocolate. Ava weeping. I spoke sharply. Face flushed. From that perspective, it looked terrible.

You recorded me? I whispered.

“No one will care why you yelled. They’ll witness a crazy mother. Look menacing and unstable. Unfit to parent.”

Feeling dizzy. You could have killed her.”

Judith turned and left.

No sleep that night. My pulse raced as I held my phone in the corridor outside the kids’ bedroom.

She would utilize the video in court. Label me dangerous. Make me seem nasty by twisting the story. Ethan’s silence showed he wouldn’t stop her.

I wanted evidence of my affection and their brutality.

I drove directly to Judith’s home after dropping the kids off at school the following morning. I wanted to discuss custody in a “amicable” manner. Even though she seemed suspicious, she allowed me in.

We spoke over herbal tea we didn’t drink. I continued looking for her phone. Unlocked and unsupervised on the coffee table for a moment.

She excused herself to switch laundry. I grabbed it as she left the hall.

I accessed the gallery.

A video from before the chocolate incident was there. Judith, beaming, whispers, “Let’s see how crazy she gets when I give little Ava something sweet.”

I transmitted the video to myself, removed the message trace, and put the phone back.

When she returned, I smiled nicely. “I appreciate the tea.”

I gave my lawyer the footage that night.

“This changes everything,” he remarked.

Ethan’s lawyer used my ranting video in court as “evidence” of my instability.

My lawyer rose and stated, “We have the full footage.”

He played Judith’s tape. Silence in court.

Judge watched twice. Third time.

She told Ethan, “Your mother executed a calculated, reckless act. Your wife had every incentive to respond quickly. Her efforts rescued your daughter. No unsupervised interaction with the kids for your mother. The judge gives Grace primary custody for her actions. Supervised visits only.”

Outside the courtroom, Ethan was silent. He avoided looking at me.

Sitting on the seat with her arms crossed, Judith raged as if the world had betrayed her.

I didn’t care.

My kids were waiting down the hall. I saw a little, optimistic grin from Jonah. Ava raced to me, arms extended.

I hugged them and murmured, “We’re okay now.”

And we were. We left the building hand in hand into the daylight. Safe. Together. And free.

 

 

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