I was supposed to be away for two months on a business trip, but I finished my work early and decided to surprise my husband and my son by coming home two weeks ahead of schedule. The surprise turned out to be mine. When I walked through the door, the house looked like a frat party had taken over—empty bottles on the table, loud music blasting, and my husband Mark laughing with a group of his friends. The first thing I asked was the only thing that mattered. “Where’s Jake?” My sixteen-year-old son should have been home from school hours ago. Mark barely glanced at me before shrugging. “He moved out,” he said casually, as if he were talking about an old piece of furniture.
My stomach dropped. “What do you mean he moved out?” I demanded. Mark rolled his eyes and muttered something about Jake needing to learn responsibility and not following his rules. Within an hour I found my son two blocks away, sleeping on a bench at a bus stop with his backpack clutched tightly against his chest. When he saw me, his tired eyes widened. “Mom?” he whispered. My heart broke when he explained what had happened. The day after I left, Mark had thrown him out of the house and warned him not to tell me or things would get worse. For more than a month Jake had been drifting between friends’ couches and the streets while Mark carried on with parties like nothing had happened.
I was furious, but instead of confronting Mark immediately, I decided he needed a lesson he would never forget. I called an old friend of mine named David, who happened to be a police officer. Two nights later Mark hosted another loud party, his friends filling the house again. Right on cue, there was a knock at the door. When Mark opened it, he found two officers and David standing there. Calmly, David explained they had received a report that a minor had been illegally forced out of his legal residence and they needed to ask some questions. Mark’s confidence vanished instantly as his friends began slipping quietly out the door.
I stepped forward and added, as politely as I could, that I had already spoken with a lawyer as well. Within a week Mark was packing his belongings and leaving the house—the one I had owned long before we ever married. Jake and I stood on the porch watching the moving truck pull away. He looked up at me nervously and asked if everything was going to be okay. I wrapped my arm around his shoulders and told him the truth: it already was. For the first time in weeks, he smiled, knowing he was finally back where he belonged—home. READ MORE BELOW