З життя
How the Husband Left His Wife Just When She Finally Became a Mother

**”I Dont Need You Anymore”: How the Husband Left His Wife When She Could Finally Be a Mother**
When Eleanor came home from work on a Friday evening, she had no idea her life was about to change forever. Pushing open the door, she called out as usual:
“Darling, Im home!”
Silence. The house felt unnervingly still.
“Thats odd He should be here by now,” she thought, heading to the bedroom.
She pushed the door open and froze. Vincent, her husband, stood by the bed, hurriedly stuffing clothes into a suitcase.
“Vincent What are you doing?” she whispered, disbelief washing over her.
“Im leaving,” he replied flatly, not even looking at her.
“Leaving? Why? Whats happened?”
“Its because of your dad,” he snapped.
“My dad? Whats he got to do with this?”
Eleanor couldnt make sense of his words, his tone, or what was unfolding in front of her. In that moment, the life shed poured so much love, patience, and warmth into crumbled before her eyes.
Theyd met when Eleanor was twenty-eight. Vincent was eight years olderconfident, charming, experienced. At the time, she thought shed found the right man. Family and friends kept insisting it was time to settle down. “The clocks ticking,” theyd say. “Youre not getting any younger.” Eleanor began seeing every suitor as a potential husbandwhich, naturally, scared most of them off.
But Vincent was different. They met at a café through a mutual friend, and the conversation flowed. He was polite, attentive. And when he found out Eleanor owned her own flat, had a new car, a good job at the council, and a father who ran a successful business suddenly, he became even more affectionate.
A year later, they had a lavish weddingall paid for by her father. Vincent didnt complain. In fact, he happily accepted a job as a sales manager at one of his father-in-laws shops.
At first, married life felt like a fairy tale: holidays abroad, fancy dinners, gifts. Only one thing ruined itVincent never paid for anything. It was always Eleanor. At first, she didnt mind. Then she started asking. Eventually, she begged.
“Why am I the one carrying everything?” she complained to a friend. “I want to feel cared for, protected.”
But Vincent just laughed.
“Dont be silly, love. Its fine. Stop overthinking it.”
At work, he barely lifted a finger, spending hours on his phone, stashing his earnings in his own account. Eleanor had no idea.
Then she fell ill. Seriously ill. She spent a month in hospital. Her parents visited every day; Vincent, rarely so. When she finally came home, she was shockedfilth everywhere, dishes piled up, rubbish strewn across the floor.
“You didnt clean at all?” she gasped.
“Why would I? Thats a womans job,” he replied, shrugging.
“But I was in hospital, Vincent! And you expect me to clean up after you?”
“Youre home now, arent you? So get on with it.”
Shaking with weakness, Eleanor hired a cleaning crew. The doctor warned her: recovery would take at least a year. And trying for a baby? Out of the question.
A year later, when doctors finally gave her the all-clear, she told her husband, beaming.
“Can you believe it? We can We can start trying!”
“Im busy. Nows not a good time,” he grunted, eyes glued to his PlayStation controllerthe gift shed bought him, now his only interest.
Weeks passed. He kept ignoring her. Until one day, he confessed:
“Look, Eleanor Im leaving. And I dont want a child with you.”
“What are you talking about?”
“I dont love you. Never did. I was with you because it was convenient. Flat, money, car. Now Im bored. I dont need you anymore.”
“Vincent, you cant do this After everything I went through, everything I waited for!”
“Your problem, not mine. Im a free man.”
He zipped up his suitcase, tossed in his console, and walked out.
Eleanor stopped eating, stopped sleeping. She just sat at home, staring at nothing. Three days later, her worried parents showed up. Her father, seeing her like that, could barely contain his rage.
They took her to their countryside house. Vincent was fired that same night. Soon after, Eleanors dad, William, pulled some strings and had his son-in-laws accounts frozen. Every penny of his “savings” vanished.
Vincent had nothing left: no job, no home. He could barely afford a rented room. What to do next? He had no clue.
Months later, Eleanor found a new job. There, she met a man named James. He wasnt young, but he was honest, steady, and from the very first glance, he treated her with kindness and respect.
Six months later, a miracle happenedtwo lines on a pregnancy test. Tears, laughter, a phone call to her parents and endless gratitude that, one day, shed found the courage to say, “Enough.”
