“I am not being dramatic, I am asking why you made a decision about my house without involving me,” I answered, holding his gaze even though my stomach felt hollow.
“Your house?” he repeated, almost amused, as if the idea itself sounded ridiculous to him.
“Yes, my house,” I said firmly, even though part of me was already bracing for what he would say next.
Gavin walked toward me slowly, his confidence almost theatrical, and then he said something that changed everything in a single breath. “Abigail, this house belongs to me now.”
I did not respond immediately because some statements require a few seconds for the brain to accept that they were actually spoken out loud.
He continued speaking as if explaining something obvious, saying that I had bought the house after we were already married, and therefore everything I owned was automatically his as well.
“If you plan to create problems for my family, then you need to adjust quickly because I am the one in charge here,” he added, his voice calm in a way that made the threat even more unsettling.
“I paid for it myself with the money from selling my company,” I replied, keeping my tone steady even though my thoughts were racing.
He shrugged as if none of that mattered and said, “Then prove it.”
That moment chilled me more than anything else he had ever done, because it was not just about lying or being controlling but about how easily he tried to rewrite reality in front of me as if I would eventually accept his version without resistance.
I did not sleep that night, and instead I lay staring at the ceiling while remembering every small moment I had dismissed over the years, including the way I had allowed him to reshape my own story to include himself as a contributor.
I realized that everything had happened gradually, so gradually that I never noticed how much of my own truth I had been adjusting to keep the peace.
The next morning he left early, adjusting his watch and grabbing his keys with that same quiet certainty, then he said he was heading to the airport to pick up his parents and Lindsay and that I should already understand how things would work by the time he returned.
I simply nodded instead of arguing, and the moment the door closed behind him I opened my laptop on the kitchen island and began reviewing every document connected to the house.