He laughed at me over dinner. Loud, cruel, and calculated. In front of his friends, he made a joke about my body—my weight, my shape, my worth. I smiled through it, swallowing the humiliation like bitter wine. But something shifted that night. Not just in me—but in the air between us. His cruelty wasn’t new, but this time, it felt like a dare.
Later, while he slept off his arrogance, I opened the drawer he always kept locked. I wasn’t looking for revenge—I was looking for answers. What I found was a truth so sharp it cut through years of silence.
Photos. Receipts. Messages. A hidden life. He had mocked my body while secretly chasing others—women he praised, admired, desired. He had written things about me to them. Words like “burden,” “clingy,” “not my type.” And yet, I had been the one paying his bills, cooking his meals, loving him through every failure.
I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I wrote a letter. Not to him—but to his mother. I told her everything. The dinner. The drawer. The years of quiet sacrifice. I mailed it with no return address.
Weeks later, I received a message from her. Just one line: “You deserve better than my son.”
He never mocked me again. Because I never sat at his table again.
