Jack never took a sick day—not even when his mom passed away—so when he stayed home one morning, I knew something was off. But nothing could’ve prepared me for what I found on our front porch: a life-sized porcelain-white statue of Jack. It looked exactly like him. He was pale and visibly shaken as he pulled it inside without saying a word.
Later that day, our son Noah handed me a note he’d found tucked under the statue. It was from a woman named Sally:
“I’m returning the statue I made while believing you loved me. You owe me $10,000… or your wife sees every message.”
I dropped the kids off at school, sat in a parking lot, and cried until I couldn’t anymore. Then I called the first female divorce lawyer I could find and showed her the note.
“This woman sculpted my husband. And now she’s blackmailing him.”
That night, I went through Jack’s emails. There were dozens of messages between him and Sally—clear proof of the affair. I saved everything. When I reached out to her, she told me Jack said he was divorced. They had been seeing each other for nearly a year. She even agreed to testify in court.
And she did—bringing every receipt with her.
The judge ruled in my favor: I got the house, full custody of the kids, and Jack was ordered to pay Sally the $10,000 he owed her. He couldn’t even look at me in court.
Outside the courtroom, he tried to apologize.
“You never meant for me to find out,” I told him—and then I walked away.
I left him standing there—alone with his lies, that statue, and the mess he made.