When Marilyn agreed to leave her home every weekend so her husband could spend time with his son, she thought she was being supportive. But after months, an unexpected return home revealed the shocking truth.
Marilyn believed her marriage to Scott was strong. They had dated for two years before getting married, and she had formed a good bond with his six-year-old son, Ben. His mother, Patricia, had seemed fine with her presence—until the wedding. Then, things changed.
One evening, Scott dropped a bombshell. “Patricia doesn’t want Ben around you anymore,” he said hesitantly. “She thinks it’ll confuse him. If she finds out you’re here on weekends, she’ll make things difficult.”
Marilyn was stunned. “But Ben and I get along great! He loved the science experiments we did last weekend.”
“I know, I know,” Scott said. “But Patricia is threatening to reduce my time with him. This is temporary.”
Marilyn felt forced to agree. So every Friday, she packed her bags and stayed at her parents’ house, feeling like an unwelcome guest in her own home. Weeks turned into months, and every time she questioned it, Scott reassured her, insisting they had to keep the arrangement for Ben’s sake.
But one Friday, as she drove toward her parents’ house, a thought hit her: Why am I doing this? She made a sharp U-turn and returned home.
The house was unusually quiet. When she stepped into the living room, Ben was nowhere in sight. Instead, she found Scott lounging on the couch—his arm draped around Patricia, who was wearing Marilyn’s new silk pajamas.
“What the hell is going on?” Marilyn demanded.
Scott shot up in panic. “Marilyn! You’re supposed to be at your parents’!”
Patricia smirked, running a hand down the pajama fabric. “Looks like someone went off-script.”
Marilyn turned to her. “Where’s Ben?”
“At my mother’s,” Patricia replied smoothly. “They have movie nights every Friday. Didn’t Scott tell you?” She glanced at him with fake concern. “Oh, darling, don’t tell me you’ve been lying to your wife?”
Everything clicked. “This was never about Ben, was it?”
Patricia laughed. “Smart girl. I told Scott that if he wanted another chance with me, I needed weekends to see if we could fix things. Sending you away was his idea.”
Marilyn pulled out her phone and played a secret recording from the week before. Scott’s voice filled the room: “I love you, Marilyn. Patricia is just being selfish. Once Ben is older, things will go back to normal, and we can have our own kids. You’re the love of my life.”
Patricia’s smile vanished. She grabbed a slipper and hurled it at Scott. “You lying piece of garbage! You’ve been playing both sides? Pathetic!”
Scott ducked, but Marilyn didn’t care. Patricia stormed out, pausing only when Marilyn called after her, “Feel free to keep my pajamas. I know you can’t afford them!”
Then, Marilyn turned to Scott. Ignoring his desperate pleas, she marched upstairs, grabbed his clothes, and tossed them out the window.
“Marilyn, stop!” Scott begged.
“If you come any closer, I’ll scream,” she warned, her voice dangerously calm.
His expensive suits, shoes, watches, and golf clubs followed. “Now pick up your junk and get out of my life.”
Scott stared at her, defeated, then slowly left. As he gathered his belongings from the lawn, he turned back. “We can fix this. I never meant to hurt you.”
Marilyn’s voice was ice-cold. “I don’t want to hear from you except through lawyers.”
She shut the door, exhaled deeply, and pulled out her phone. A message from her mom popped up: “Everything okay? You never made it here.”
Smiling, Marilyn typed back: “Everything’s perfect, Mom. No one is ever kicking me out of my place again.”