I thought Collins was the one. He was gentle, thoughtful, and remembered small things like my sick cat or my favorite tea. After a year of dating, he proposed, and I moved into the house he shared with his mother, Jenna. That’s when things changed. Chore lists replaced affection, and I became the unpaid maid. Collins stopped helping, and Jenna began treating me like live-in staff. I thought it was temporary until it became the new normal.
Then I got injured at work. Torn ligament. Six weeks off my feet. Collins said he’d take care of me. The first day, he and Jenna carried me upstairs, fluffed pillows, handed me water and locked the bedroom door from the outside. I was stunned. Minutes later, a paper slid under the door: a “Home Contribution Agreement” demanding I cook, clean, and pay rent once recovered. Their signatures were on it. Mine was missing but they left me a pen.
What they didn’t know? I had a backup plan. I’d hidden a spare key behind the headboard months ago. I unlocked the door, grabbed my phone, and called my sister. When police arrived, I handed them the contract and my medical papers. Collins and Jenna tried to spin it but the truth was clear. I left that night and never looked back.
A week later, I filed for divorce. Collins tried to fight it, but my brother-in-law who’s a lawyer buried him in evidence. He lost the case, and his job. Jenna got evicted. When I saw Collins at the pharmacy weeks later, he said, “You ruined my life.” I smiled. “No I just finally chose mine.”