For months, my husband was disappearing before my eyes.
Jake and I had been married for four years, but in the last two months, he became a ghost in the home we built together.
He avoided my gaze, our conversations thinned into silence, and our dinners felt like rituals in a house already grieving something unspoken.
I kept telling myself it was work.
Until I couldn’t lie to myself anymore.He moved into the garage after an argument that ended with him calling me “clingy” and slamming the door like punctuation. At first, I thought he just needed space. Then I started noticing the signs.
Perfume on his collar I didn’t wear.
Receipts from restaurants we’d never been to together.
His phone—once left carelessly around the house—now lived in his pocket, buzzing silently at night while he claimed he was too tired to talk.
I asked if he was cheating.
He deflected, accused me of paranoia, and locked himself deeper into his “projects” in the garage.
And I let him.Until the night I couldn’t anymore.
It was just past midnight. I heard the garage door whisper shut. Something inside me shifted. Maybe it was instinct. Maybe it was the weight of too many nights lying awake, staring at the ceiling, pretending not to care.
I got out of bed and walked to the garage door.
I opened it slowly, stepped into the dark, and-