The entire room went quiet as they waited for me to explain. Jonathan crossed his arms and demanded that I tell him what exactly he had forgotten.
I walked further into the living room and placed the champagne bottle carefully on the table. “For three years, I have been the one paying off your business loan,” I said in a steady voice.
Vanessa smirked and said that they already knew that because Jonathan had told her everything. I looked at her and smiled politely before shaking my head.
“Oh no, he definitely did not tell you everything,” I replied calmly.
Jonathan frowned and told me to stop being dramatic because he clearly thought I was trying to create unnecessary tension. I reached into my handbag and pulled out a folder before placing it on the coffee table.
Inside were the official loan documents that he had signed years ago when his company was on the edge of collapse. Patricia leaned forward slightly and asked what exactly we were supposed to be looking at.
I opened the folder to the final page and pointed directly at a specific section. Jonathan glanced down at the document with boredom at first, but then confusion slowly replaced that expression.
“What is it,” Vanessa asked while leaning over his shoulder to see better.
Right after I cleared my husband’s $300,000 debt, he admitted he’d been unfaithful and told me to leave our home. His parents sided with the other woman, and I couldn’t help but laugh as I met his eyes and asked whether he had completely lost his mind and forgotten something crucial.
The day I finished paying off my husband’s $300,000 business loan should have been the brightest moment of our marriage, because for three long years I had lived like someone fighting to stay afloat rather than someone enjoying life. I took on nonstop consulting work, pushed through sleepless nights to complete reports, and even sold a small apartment my parents had left me so every cent could go toward rescuing his failing company.
My husband, Jonathan Brooks, always insisted we were partners and that everything we built belonged to both of us. He promised that once the debt was gone, we would finally enjoy the life we deserved without constant pressure hanging over us.