My Wife's 'Milk Tea' Secret Divorce at the Baby ShowerChapter 1 The Divorce Decree
Claire returned to work before her maternity leave had barely begun. In a standard thirty-day month, she worked overtime for twenty-nine of them. She left before dawn and returned long after midnight, too "busy" to spare a single glance at our daughter, who screamed until her throat was raw, begging to be fed.
I had reached my limit.
The breaking point wasn't a catastrophe, but a receipt—milk tea she'd bought for her colleagues. That was when I demanded a divorce.
The declaration hit the room like a bomb.
"Are you out of your mind?" someone shouted. "You're divorcing her over milk tea?"
Claire's face twisted with rage. She snatched a glass baby bottle from the table and hurled it at me. It struck my forehead with a sickening crack. Warm liquid trickled down my brow, blinding one eye in a crimson haze.
I didn't flinch. Ignoring the sting and the blood dripping onto my collar, I slammed the printed divorce agreement onto the table.
"Sign it."
——
It was our daughter's hundred-day celebration. Claire had spared no expense, inviting every relative, friend, classmate, and coworker we knew. The ballroom, previously buzzing with laughter and toasts, had fallen into suffocating silence.
"Liam, I've just been busy with the company," Claire argued, her voice trembling. "If you can't handle the baby, hire a nanny. Is that really worth humiliating me in front of everyone? Over a few drinks?"
She stared at me, eyes wide with disbelief. Without reading a word, she seized the document and shredded it, letting the confetti rain between us.
"Yes, it is."
I met her gaze, my voice steady. The guests exchanged bewildered glances. Everyone knew Claire and I were high school sweethearts—from school uniforms to wedding attire. Five years married, ostensibly the perfect couple. To them, this was insanity. Even my in-laws stared at me like I was a stranger.
"You're throwing away your marriage because she bought beverages for her staff?" my father-in-law, Scott, demanded.
I cut him off. "Not beverages. Milk tea."
Scott frowned. "What the hell is the difference? Since when did you become so petty?"
"There is a difference," I said flatly.
"You..." Scott choked, pointing a shaking finger at me.