“Sign or I’ll drag this out for years,” my husband spat, shoving the papers across the marble kitchen island of the penthouse I had paid for in full, every slab of stone and pane of glass funded by my inheritance, my overtime hours, and a loan I had eliminated long before I walked down the aisle beside him. He stood there as if he were doing me a favor, as if forcing me out of my own home were a gesture of mercy rather than an act of calculated humiliation. The late afternoon sun poured in through the towering windows overlooking the Guadalquivir, setting his face aglow with a confidence that bordered on theatrical cruelty.
He smiled the way a man smiles when he believes he has already won, when he imagines the other person crumbling before the real battle even begins. I held his gaze without blinking, feeling something inside me settle into a strange, crystalline calm. My pulse did not race. My hands did not tremble. I picked up the pen he had placed deliberately beside the documents and asked him, quietly, if this was truly what he wanted. He replied without hesitation that it was what he deserved.