icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

When Family Becomes A Prison

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 315    |    Released on: 11/06/2025

ning, the su

nt inside, then walked to the

d in a silk robe, looking

ou doing out here? I

codes," I said. M

pgrade. I meant to tell yo

ound her legs, t

divorce,

small, incredulous

don't be ridiculous.

code, Jessica. It'

er, summoned by the raised vo

ern. "Michael, what is

I said. "I'm di

id, her voice like chipped ice. "Wh

t, wasn't it? They tho

steady. "Not the house, not the car, not a cent

ed, a flicker of somethin

dy. It' s better for he

nge mix of confusion and

ouldn't have to c

he job," I added, lo

throwing away everyt

ng what I gav

kout. She couldn't see the seven years of

I was finally, truly

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
When Family Becomes A Prison
When Family Becomes A Prison
“For seven years, I lived a life of gilded gratitude, managing the Ashworths' sprawling estate and their demanding schedules. I was the loyal husband to Jessica, the devoted stay-at-home dad to Sophie, constantly reminded of the "debt" I owed for their rescue. My world revolved around their convenience, their expectations, their rules. On paper, I had everything: a wealthy family, a beautiful home, even a new promotion at their company. Then, after a rare night out celebrating that promotion, I returned to the house I managed. The security code was rejected. I tried again. Rejected. Through the window, I saw Sophie's shadow. I called her name, desperate, but she vanished. Jessica had changed the codes, and told our daughter not to open the door. The humiliation was a cold, hard knot in my gut, sharper than any betrayal. I spent that night shivering in my car, staring at the house that was never truly mine. The next morning, facing Jessica and her parents, I declared I wanted a divorce, willing to walk away penniless. Their scoffing, their incredulity, Mrs. Ashworth' s icy question, "Where would you go? What would you do?" rang like a prison sentence. They saw a man throwing away everything they' d "given" him, unable to comprehend the seven years of silently endured disrespect, the slow suffocation of my spirit. They thought it was about a security code, but it was about every condescending glance, every undermining comment, every minute I' d spent playing their grateful puppet. My gratitude, once a heavy cloak, had finally become an unbearable chain. So, I left. I walked away from the Ashworths, the mansion, the gilded cage, and the woman who never truly saw me. With nothing but an old pickup and a dilapidated family cabin, I began building something new, brick by painful brick, not for them, but for myself. This wasn't an end; it was finally a beginning.”