I Married My School Sweetheart – On Our First Anniversary, I Overheard a Phone Call That Made Me Gasp

"The trust was restructured."

I picked up my wine glass, the one I'd set down, and walked it to the sink. I tipped it out slowly.

Then I turned back to the two people who'd plotted against me for years.

"Now," I said. "Let's talk about what happens next."

I looked at Aaron, then at Diane, and I felt something settle in my chest that I hadn't felt in years: calm.

"You know what's funny?" I said. "I fell in love with a boy on a porch swing when I was a teenager. But that boy never existed."

Aaron's mouth opened, but he couldn't find the right words to say.

I tipped it out slowly.

"I won't waste another tear on a stranger wearing his face," I added.

My stepmother straightened, gripping her folder as if it could still save her.

"And you. My mother's house will never be yours. Not in this life. Not in the next one."

I reached into my handbag and pulled out a manila envelope I'd tucked there that morning. I set it gently in Aaron's hands.

"Annulment papers," I told him. "When Mr. Whitfield restructured the trust in August, I asked him to draw these up too. A contingency. To be filed only if I ever confirmed what I'd been afraid of for a long time. Fraud in the inducement of marriage. He says it's a clean case."

"I won't waste another tear."

My husband finally found his voice.

"Sandra, wait, please!"

"I waited for 15 years, Aaron. I'm done waiting."

I walked them both to the door. Then I closed it.

***

Weeks later, I sat on my grandmother's porch swing with coffee warming my hands. The deed was back in my name. The trust was untouched. The annulment was final.

"Sandra, wait, please!"

Megan pulled up and climbed the steps with two pastries in a paper bag.

"How are you, really?" she asked.

"Tired and sad," I said. "But good."

She squeezed my hand, and we rocked together in the quiet.

"How are you, really?"

***

So that's where I am, friends. I'm not dating anyone, and I'm healing slowly.

I'm also learning to trust myself and my instincts for the first time since before I married Aaron.