My husband Kyle started laying out poison traps for the raccoons tearing through our backyard. I begged him to find a humane way, but he scoffed. One moonlit night, I heard rustling and followed the sound, heart pounding. What I found near the overturned trash left me frozen—my breath caught in my throat. A piece of our shattered life was hidden in those trembling creatures.
It had started days earlier, when Kyle hurled a rock at a pregnant raccoon. “They’re vermin, Josie,” he barked, eyes cold. I stood there, shaking, still stunned that after fifteen years, his rage could still gut me. When I suggested safer fencing or sealed bins, he mocked me—said pain was the only thing pests understood. That’s when I realized his cruelty wasn’t just aimed at animals.
Then came the night I opened that rustling bag—and found three trembling, newborn raccoons. I called for Kyle, and he didn’t even blink. “Let them die,” he muttered. That was the moment I broke. I scooped them up and ran like my soul depended on it—because maybe it did.
Marla at the wildlife center took us in without questions. “The ones we save often end up saving us,” she whispered. Weeks later, I found Kyle’s journal—page after page of cold, calculated rage. I left, took my name back, and started again. When he called me weak, I smiled—because he no longer had power over me.