When I decided to join my husband, Henry, on one of his late-night trips to his ex-wife’s house, I didn’t know what to expect. She opened the door in a silk robe with her hair perfectly styled and her lips glossy. The surprise on her face when she saw me beside him said everything. Henry headed straight to the kitchen with his toolbox, while I stood back and observed. Something about the scene made me realize this had gone on long enough.
Henry and I met in a bookstore years ago, both reaching for the same copy of The Great Gatsby. Five years of marriage later, he still gives me butterflies—at least most days. But recently, his constant trips to help Liz had tested my patience. Every call from her seemed urgent: a leaky faucet, a broken remote, a wobbly railing. Meanwhile, our own faucet at home had been dripping for weeks without attention. I couldn’t ignore the imbalance any longer.
That night, while Henry fixed a simple pipe leak, I handed Liz a folded paper. On it was a list of trusted plumbers, electricians, and gardeners she could call instead of my husband. She gave me a sharp look, but I stayed calm and polite. “Henry’s a kind man,” I said softly. “But he has a home and a wife who need him too.” Her kitchen was spotless, her house in order—it was clear this wasn’t really about emergencies.
On the way home, Henry admitted he hadn’t realized how his actions looked. I placed a lawyer’s card on the dashboard, not as a threat, but to show how serious I felt. He grew quiet, then promised to tell Liz she’d need to call professionals from now on. That was months ago, and true to his word, he hasn’t gone back. Liz found someone else to help, and Henry finally fixed our faucet. More importantly, he remembered where his real priorities belong.