He Wanted Everything But His Son — Then His Lawyer Read The Addendum-Teptep

Daniel asked for the divorce on an evening so ordinary it almost felt insulting.

The kitchen smelled faintly of toast from Ethan’s tea, the kettle had clicked off without anyone pouring a cup, and drizzle tapped against the skylight Daniel used to boast about whenever people visited.

We were sitting at the island in the house I had helped shape for twelve years.

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Not just decorate.

Shape.

I had chosen the cupboard handles, argued for the extra sockets, painted the spare room twice because Daniel decided the first colour made the house look “cheap”, and stood barefoot in dust when the builders were still finishing the hallway.

Daniel liked to call it his house when he was with people he wanted to impress.

At home, when there was a leak, a bill, a broken appliance, or a crying child, it became ours again.

That night, he sat with both hands folded in front of him and his phone placed face down, as though he had prepared for a meeting.

“I want a divorce,” he said.

No apology.

No flinch.

No small pause to honour the fact that the sentence had just cut through a family.

I looked at him and waited.

Daniel had always believed silence belonged to him, so I let him sit in mine.

He cleared his throat.

“I want the house, the cars, the savings,” he continued. “Everything.”

The word sat between us, broad and greedy.

Everything.

Then his eyes flicked towards the ceiling, where Ethan was upstairs doing homework, and Daniel added, “You can keep the boy.”

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