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The moment I signed the divorce papers, I didn’t cry or hesitate. I walked out of the courthouse in downtown Chicago, sat in my car, and did something that took less than ten minutes but represented fifteen years of marriage: I canceled his fifteen credit cards. Every account. Every line of credit tied to my name, my income, my spotless financial history. I had learned long ago that quiet decisions often carry the loudest consequences.
My ex-husband, Daniel Carter, had always loved appearances. Private schools for the kids, luxury SUVs, business-class flights he called “necessary networking.” What he loved even more was spending money that wasn’t truly his. While he was “finding himself,” I was the one keeping the company books balanced, paying bills on time, and protecting our credit. When I discovered the affair, it wasn’t the betrayal that shocked me most—it was the arrogance. He assumed I would stay silent, grateful for whatever scraps of dignity he left behind.
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