
I never believed she would actually walk out.
Her parents lived nearly five hundred kilometers away, and in San Isidro, she had no one except me. I convinced myself she wouldn’t dare leave—she didn’t even have access to our bank account.
So that night, I went to sleep proud of myself, resting beside my mother.
My mother, Kamla Devi, always believed she was the great martyr of our family. She expected my wife to be silent, obedient, and thankful.
And I—ever the dutiful son—agreed.
“A wife should endure a little for the sake of peace,” I used to tell myself. “There’s nothing wrong with that.”
My wife, Mira, was from another province. We met in college in San Isidro. When we talked about marriage, my mother was livid.
“Her family is too far,” she said. “It’ll be a burden to visit.”
Mira cried, but she didn’t back down.
“Don’t worry,” she told me. “I’ll be a good daughter-in-law. I’ll take care of your parents. I’ll only visit home once a year.”
My mother eventually agreed, but she never forgot that Mira wasn’t from our town. Every time I wanted to take Mira and our baby to visit her family, she found a reason to stop us.
After our son was born, everything worsened. Every small decision turned into a fight.
I always sided with my mother. “She just wants the best for the baby,” I told Mira. “Why can’t you just listen to her?”
But Mira refused to be quiet. They argued about everything—milk, sleep schedules, how often he should be carried. My mother would yell, bang utensils, and then fall “sick” for days.
The breaking point came during a family gathering. Our baby suddenly developed a fever. My mother jabbed her finger at Mira.
“You can’t even care for my grandson properly? How could you let this happen?”
I agreed with my mother. Mira looked at me with eyes full of pain.
That night, she didn’t sleep. She stayed awake nursing our sick child. I went upstairs and slept beside my parents.
By morning, relatives had arrived to visit. My mother handed Mira a small amount of money.
“Go to the market,” she ordered. “Cook for everyone.”
Mira was exhausted. I wanted to say something, but my mother snapped: “If you go, people will laugh! She’s the daughter-in-law. This is her duty!”
Mira whispered hoarsely from the bed, “I was awake all night with your grandson. These guests are yours, not mine. I’m family, not a servant.”
My mother’s face hardened. The room fell silent. Embarrassed, furious, I dragged Mira to the storeroom.
“I have to be strict now,” I said coldly. “You need to learn respect.”
No mattress. No blanket. Just darkness.
When I opened the door the next morning—Mira was gone.
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Panic shot through me. My mother gathered everyone to search.
A neighbor spoke up: “I saw her leave last night with a suitcase. She was crying. I gave her money for a taxi. She said she was going home… that she’s filing for divorce.”
My phone nearly fell from my hand.
When Mira finally answered, her voice was calm and icy.
“I’m at my parents’ place. I’ll file for divorce in a few days. Our son will stay with me. And half the property is mine.”
I told my mother, expecting help. She scoffed.
“She’s bluffing. Ignore her.”
But deep down, I knew Mir wasn’t bluffing this time.
Three days later, a brown envelope arrived—official divorce papers, court-stamped.
Her reason was written clearly: “I suffered mental cruelty. They treated me like a servant, not a human being.”
My hands shook. I still believed she’d come back. But she had already moved on.
When my mother heard, she burst into rage.
“How dare she! Divorce is shameful! She’ll regret it and crawl back!”
But I wasn’t angry. I was terrified. If we divorced, I’d lose my son. Children under three were always placed with the mother.
The news spread fast. Relatives confronted me.
“Arun, you’ve gone mad. She just had a baby, and you locked her in the storeroom?”
Others whispered:
“The Sharma family is infamous for mistreating daughters-in-law. Who would marry into them now?”
I couldn’t defend myself. I knew they were right.
That night, I secretly called Mira. She answered, holding our sleeping child in her lap. My chest ached.
“Mira,” I whispered, “please… let me see him. I miss him.”
She stared back, expression cold.
“Now you remember him? After everything? Arun, it’s too late. I’m not coming back.”
She hung up.
Days passed. I moved through the house like a shadow. I couldn’t eat, couldn’t work. Every night, I dreamed of Mira leaving with our son while I chased helplessly behind.
Only then did I understand—I had destroyed everything myself.
One morning, my aunt touched my shoulder.
“Arun,” she said gently, “when a woman chooses divorce, it’s hard to stop her. You must decide—accept it or humble yourself and beg forgiveness. But remember, it’s not just your pride at stake. It’s the family’s honor.”
But none of that mattered compared to the emptiness where my son’s laughter used to be.
That night, standing alone in the courtyard, I knew I was at a crossroads.
Either lose everything forever…
Or, for the first time, stand up to my mother—and fight for the family I had broken.