My husband earned £2,000,000 a year, and yet I was the one counting coins at a convenience shop counter.
The cashier did not raise her voice.
That almost made it more unbearable.

“Madam, your balance is insufficient.”
She slid my card back towards me with the careful gentleness people use when they want to be kind but also need the queue to keep moving.
Behind me, four or five customers waited in that tense British silence where nobody says anything directly, but everyone makes sure you can hear the little sighs.
A shopping basket sat beside my feet with milk, bread, eggs, washing-up liquid, and a small packet of meat I had hesitated over before putting in.
Normal things.
Household things.
Things a family should be able to buy without the wife feeling her throat close in public.
I did not turn around.
I only lowered my eyes to my phone and opened the banking app.
The screen loaded slowly enough to feel cruel.
Joint savings card.
Account holder: Shen Zechu.
Available balance: £9.
I looked at the number until it blurred and came clear again.
£9.
That was what remained in the account linked to the man everyone praised as a financial elite.
That was what remained in the marriage I had kept afloat for three years.
For a second, I thought anger would come.
It should have come blazing up, hot and righteous, something loud enough to protect me from the humiliation of standing there with rejected groceries and strangers breathing down my neck.
But there was nothing.
No tears.
No shaking.
No sharp pain.
Only a strange quietness, like rain soaking into soil after the ground has already given up holding its shape.
“I’m sorry,” I said to the cashier.
My voice sounded ordinary.
“I won’t take these.”
I lifted the items out of the basket one by one and placed them back with more care than they deserved.
The cashier murmured that it was all right.
It was not all right, of course.
But politeness has always been good at covering ruin.
Outside, the evening had turned damp and grey.
The pavement shone beneath the shop signs, and the cold had slipped into my sleeves while I stood at the crossing, staring at nothing in particular.
Across the road, steam rose from a small food stall.
The owner was ladling soup from a metal pot, the smell warm and salty, bright against the wet street.
I crossed over because I still had £11.30 in my e-wallet.
Not in the joint card.
Not in the marriage.
In my own little balance, hidden away like a guilty secret.
“I’ll have a small portion of wontons,” I said.
“Eight pounds,” the owner replied. “Card or phone?”
I scanned the code and watched the payment go through.
The bowl was so hot that I had to swap it from one hand to the other before I sat down on a plastic chair by the roadside.
Steam brushed my face.
The broth was hot.
The wrappers were thin.
The filling had meat in it.
I knew these things because I could see them, not because I could taste them.
My tongue might as well have been numb.
I ate slowly anyway.
There is a kind of hunger that is not about the stomach.
There is a kind of exhaustion that does not look dramatic from the outside.
Shen Zechu earned £2,000,000 a year.
I need to say that again because for a long time I said it to myself like proof that things could not possibly be as bad as they felt.
£2,000,000 a year.
People respected him.
People listened when he spoke about markets, funds, risk, and long-term planning.
At family gatherings, relatives lowered their voices when money came up, as if wealth had made him wiser by nature.
They said I was fortunate.
They said marrying a man like him meant security.
They did not see the payment reminders on my phone.
They did not see me moving money between accounts at midnight, calculating whether the mortgage could clear before the car payment.
They did not see the utilities, service charge, shopping, petrol, gifts, meals, and credit card bills lining up like quiet little soldiers against my salary.
They did not see what happened every payday.
On the exact day Shen Zechu’s salary landed, he transferred the full amount to his mother, Zhao Guizhen.
Not a portion.
Not savings after expenses.
The lot.
He did it with the neat certainty of a man closing a door.
The first time I noticed, I thought there must have been some arrangement I did not understand.
We had only been married a few months then, and I was still trying to be patient in the way new wives are expected to be patient.
I asked him carefully.
“Zechu, shouldn’t we keep some money here for ourselves?”
He looked almost amused.
“Mum keeps it for us,” he said.
“She knows how to manage money. It’s more reliable with her than sitting with me.”
I remember standing in the kitchen with the kettle clicking off behind me.
I remember the steam from my mug clouding the cupboard door.
I remember thinking that perhaps this was just how his family worked and that if I objected too strongly, I would sound greedy.
So I swallowed the question.
Then I swallowed another one.
Then another.
Marriage does not collapse in one grand scene most of the time.
It wears away in small deductions.
A mortgage payment here.
A car loan there.
A family dinner paid for with your card because his mother had “forgotten” hers.
A credit card bill he promised to handle and then never mentioned again.
A month when you buy cheaper shampoo.
A week when you pretend you are not tired.
A night when you stand in the kitchen, looking at the sink full of bowls, and realise you are not a wife in that home.
You are the person who keeps the lights on.
You are the person who notices the empty fridge.
You are the person who apologises to delivery drivers, arranges repairs, remembers birthdays, buys gifts, pays bills, cooks dinner, and still gets asked why you look so miserable.
I was a research and development director at a cosmetics company.
My salary was not low.
That was Shen Zechu’s favourite sentence whenever I tried to talk about money.
“You earn well too,” he would say.
“As if you can’t manage.”
It was always phrased like a compliment but used like a lock.
If I earned well, I had no right to be tired.
If I could manage, he had no duty to help.
If his mother wanted money, I was expected to understand.
If I asked for our household to come first, I was selfish.
That evening, sitting beside the wet road with a paper bowl in my hands, something inside me finally stopped bargaining.
I finished the last wonton.
The broth at the bottom cooled quickly in the damp air.
Then I opened my company email.
Boss Wu had sent a message two hours earlier.
The Singapore branch was building a new product line and needed someone to lead the team there for eight months.
He had asked me about it the previous week.
At the time, I had hesitated.
I told him I had family matters to settle.
That was the phrase I used because it sounded professional and tidy.
Family matters.
It did not say that my husband gave his entire income to his mother.
It did not say that I was paying for a family that treated my labour as invisible.
It did not say that I had become afraid of checking my own bank balances because there was always one more deduction waiting.
I stared at the email until the words settled into place.
Singapore.
Eight months.
A new product line.
A team that needed me.
A reason to go somewhere my marriage could not reach me every evening asking what was for dinner.
My finger hovered above the reply button.
For three seconds, I heard Shen Zechu’s voice in my head.
You’re overreacting.
You’re impossible to understand.
Mum is doing this for us.
I typed before I could become obedient again.
“Boss Wu, I accept the project. I can leave at any time.”
I pressed send.
The screen went dark, reflecting my face back at me in the glass.
I looked tired.
Not broken.
Just tired in a way that had finally become useful.
When I got home, it was almost nine.
The lights were off in the flat except for the television flashing blue and white across the living room.
The narrow hallway smelled faintly of takeaway boxes from the night before and the damp umbrella I had left by the door.
Shen Zechu was on the sofa, one leg tucked beneath him, gaming with his phone on speaker.
Noise filled the room.
Explosions, voices, laughter from people I did not know.
He did not look up when I came in.
“You’re back?”
I changed my shoes and placed my bag down.
My coat was wet at the shoulders.
My hands were still cold.
He tapped at the screen.
“I transferred another £60,000 to Mum today.”
The sentence landed in the room as casually as weather.
“She saw a jade bracelet she liked. Said wearing it would be good for her health.”
He paused, still playing.
“Oh, and remember to pay your credit card bill this month.”
For a moment I stood very still.
The old me would have questioned him.
The old me would have said that the mortgage was due, that the car payment was coming, that the account was empty, that a bracelet was not more urgent than food.
The old me would have tried to make him understand because she still believed understanding was the missing piece.
But understanding had never been missing.
Respect had.
“As long as Mum likes it,” I said.
My voice was so calm that even he noticed.
He glanced up, frowning.
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Nothing.”
I took off my coat and hung it badly over the chair.
A drop of rain slid from the cuff to the floor.
He watched me for half a second, then returned to his game.
“Where’s dinner? Why haven’t you cooked? I’m starving.”
The question was ordinary.
That was what made it so ugly.
He had just told me he had sent £60,000 to his mother for a bracelet, then asked why I had not come home to feed him.
“Order something,” I said.
“I don’t want to cook tonight.”
His head snapped up properly then.
“What’s wrong with you now?”
I had no wish to explain the convenience shop, the rejected card, the bowl of wontons, or the email already carrying me out of his reach.
So I said nothing.
I went into the bedroom and shut the door.
Behind me, he muttered loudly enough for me to hear.
“Honestly, impossible to understand.”
The words followed me like they always did, but that night they did not stick.
I ordered porridge for myself.
When it arrived, I ate it sitting at the edge of the bed, the spoon quiet against the container.
Shen Zechu did not ask whether I had eaten.
He did not knock.
He did not apologise.
Later, he came to bed as if nothing had happened.
The mattress dipped.
He turned his back to me.
Within minutes, he was asleep.
Then he began to snore.
I lay beside him with my eyes open, staring at the ceiling.
The room was dim, lit only by the weak line of light under the curtains and the occasional glow from his charging phone.
I thought about the first year of our marriage.
Back then, he had known how to be gentle in small ways.
He carried my laptop bag when it was raining.
He waited outside my office with a hot drink when I worked late.
He once told me he admired the way I could solve problems without making noise.
That had felt like love.
Later, I understood that he admired the usefulness of it.
A woman who solves problems quietly is very convenient to a man who creates them.
At 11:30, his snoring deepened.
I slipped out from under the duvet.
The carpet was cold beneath my feet.
I did not turn on the main light.
Instead, I used the small bedside lamp and moved slowly, carefully, as if the room itself might betray me.
The wardrobe opened with a soft creak.
I paused.
He did not move.
I took out the small suitcase first.
The zip caught at the corner, and I held my breath until it slid free.
Into the suitcase went work clothes, a plain cardigan, toiletries, chargers, and the black notebook I used for product formulas.
Then came the important things.
Personal documents.
Passport.
Bank card.
A spare contactless card I kept in the pocket of an old handbag.
The small appointment card from the travel clinic.
A folded company letter I had printed months earlier and hidden without admitting to myself why.
Each object made almost no sound.
Each one felt louder than shouting.
I opened the bottom drawer for a scarf and saw the corner of a creased envelope beneath it.
For a second, I forgot to breathe.
I had put it there two years earlier after an argument I had nearly convinced myself was my fault.
That was the night Zhao Guizhen called to say she needed a large transfer because she had found an “excellent investment”.
I had asked Shen Zechu whether we could at least check the household bills first.
He had stared at me across the kitchen table.
“My mum isn’t an outsider,” he said.
Then he added the part that stayed with me.
“You’re making money dirty.”
I remember the kettle clicking off in that silence.
I remember my untouched mug of tea cooling beside the sink.
I remember opening my banking app later and taking screenshots, not because I knew what I would do with them, but because some quiet part of me wanted proof that I was not imagining my own life.
I printed the transfer records at work.
Then I folded them into that envelope and hid them under the scarf.
Now my fingers touched it again.
The paper felt dry and thin.
My hand trembled as I pulled it out.
Inside were copies of transfers month after month.
Salary in.
Transfer out.
Zhao Guizhen.
Again.
Again.
Again.
At the back was the printed letter from my company confirming I was eligible to lead an overseas project if I accepted.
I had kept it like a door I was too frightened to open.
Tonight, the door was open.
My phone lit up on the bed.
The glow made my heart kick once, hard.
It was a message from Boss Wu.
“Flight can be arranged for tomorrow morning. Are you certain?”
I looked at Shen Zechu asleep on his side.
His mouth was slightly open.
One hand rested near his phone.
He looked peaceful, as people often do when they believe someone else will always absorb the consequences.
I typed my reply slowly.
“Yes. I’m certain.”
Before I could send it, Shen Zechu shifted.
The snoring stopped.
The room changed immediately.
Silence became a living thing.
I froze with one hand over the suitcase and the other holding the envelope.
The mattress creaked.
He turned towards me.
His voice came through the dark, thick with sleep but already edged with suspicion.
“What are you doing?”
I did not answer at once.
There are moments when a life narrows to one sound, one object, one breath held too long.
Mine narrowed to the envelope in my hand and the open suitcase at my knees.
His eyes moved from my face to the clothes, then to the passport, then to the papers spread across the bed.
He sat up.
“What is all this?”
I heard the old habit rise in me.
The apology.
The explanation.
The careful tone designed to stop him becoming angry.
Sorry, I was just organising things.
Sorry, I didn’t want to wake you.
Sorry, I should have told you.
But the word sorry did not come.
Not this time.
My phone buzzed again before I could speak.
Then the phone in the living room began ringing.
Its sound cut through the flat, shrill and repeated, making the narrow hallway feel even smaller.
Shen Zechu looked towards the door.
I already knew who it was before the name appeared.
Zhao Guizhen.
Of course.
His mother had always known when to call.
He threw back the duvet and stood up.
“Why is my mum calling at this hour?”
His voice was sharper now.
He walked to the doorway, then stopped.
Because the envelope in my hand had opened.
Because the top sheet had slipped just enough for him to see the transfer records.
Because, for once, the proof was not inside my head where he could dismiss it.
It was on paper.
It was in my hand.
It was next to my passport.
The ringing continued.
He looked at the papers, then at me.
“What have you done?”
That question almost made me laugh.
Not because it was funny.
Because even then, even with his salary emptied into his mother’s account and his wife packing in the dark, his first instinct was to make me the one who had done something.
I picked up my phone.
Boss Wu’s message still glowed on the screen.
Flight can be arranged for tomorrow morning.
Are you certain?
My thumb hovered above send.
In the living room, his mother’s call went on and on.
Shen Zechu stepped towards me, eyes fixed on the envelope.
“Give me that.”
I held it tighter.
Outside, rain tapped softly against the window.
Inside, the suitcase lay open between us like a line drawn on the bed.
For three years, I had paid the bills, cooked the meals, carried the shame, and called it marriage.
For three years, he had handed his life to his mother and left me to fund the home he treated like a hotel.
Now the house was quiet except for the ringing phone.
I pressed send.
Then I looked straight at him and said the first honest sentence I had allowed myself in a very long time.
“I’m leaving tomorrow.”
His face changed.
Not with sorrow.
With panic.
Real panic.
The kind that appears only when a person finally understands the servant has found the door.
He looked once more at the suitcase, the passport, the bank card, and the envelope.
Then he looked towards the living room, where Zhao Guizhen was still calling.
For the first time in our marriage, he did not know which woman to answer first.
And I knew that by morning, when my phone came back on after take-off, the missed calls would begin.