I Worked Two Jobs to Help My Husband Become a Doctor – At His Graduation, He Handed Me Divorce Papers, but Then His Classmate Stopped Me
Then I stopped opening the closet.
By the time graduation came, I had built entire private rituals around that word.
When Nathan matched into a strong residency program in internal medicine, he picked me up in our kitchen and spun me around until I hit his shoulder and laughed.
“We did it,” he said.
“You did it.”
He smiled into my shoulder. “No. We did.”
By the time graduation came, I had built entire private rituals around that word.
But in the last month before graduation, Nathan changed.
We.
We made it.
We survived.
We were finally at the edge of the life I had been postponing for years.
But in the last month before graduation, Nathan changed.
Not enough for anyone else to notice. But I certainly did.
Once, I saw a folder in his bag with my name printed on a tab.
He started taking calls outside.
He shut his laptop when I walked into the room.
Once, I saw a folder in his bag with my name printed on a tab.
“What’s that?” I asked.
He zipped the bag too quickly.
“Just paperwork,” he said. “Nothing for you to worry about.”
His mother wouldn’t meet my eyes.
I wanted so badly to believe we were past the hard part that I let myself believe him.
At graduation, I sat in the audience crying before the ceremony even ended. I watched Nathan cross the stage and thought, There he is. There is the man I built a life around.
Afterward, I found him near the edge of the lawn, still in his gown, his family standing a few feet behind him.
His mother wouldn’t meet my eyes.
Not even when I smiled at her.
Nathan stepped toward me and handed me a large envelope.
That should have told me she already knew I was about to be removed from the picture.
Nathan stepped toward me and handed me a large envelope.
I laughed through my tears.
“What is this?”
He didn’t answer.
I opened it.
He looked guilty, struck silent by what he had decided to hand me.
Divorce papers.
For a second, the words made no sense. I kept looking at them, waiting for them to rearrange into something human.
“Nathan?”
His face had gone completely blank. He looked guilty, struck silent by what he had decided to hand me.
“I’m sorry,” he said.
Then he turned and walked away.
I don’t know how long I stood there.
He had a diploma waiting in one hand.
I had divorce papers shaking in mine.
I don’t know how long I stood there. The crowd kept moving around me. Parents were taking photos. People were cheering. Somewhere nearby, someone popped a bottle of champagne.
I started walking just to have something to do; to keep my body occupied.
I had almost reached the parking lot when someone called my name.
Daniel’s expression changed instantly.
I turned. It was one of Nathan’s classmates, Daniel. I’d met him maybe four times. He was smart, steady, the kind of person who always looked like he had slept eight hours even in med school.
He took one look at my face and slowed.
“Are you okay?”
I laughed once, sharp and empty. “My husband just handed me divorce papers at his graduation, so no.”
Daniel’s expression changed instantly.
“Don’t go home alone,” he said.
“What?”
“Please. There are things you need to know before you talk to him further.”
Something was very wrong here, and I had no idea how to approach this.
He glanced back toward the graduation crowd and lowered his voice.
“Hospital compliance contacted the residency program last week,” he said.
“About what?”
“Nathan’s aid records.”
I could feel a knot in my stomach forming. Something was very wrong here, and I had no idea how to approach this.
“Someone filed a complaint. They said his need-based funding did not match his actual support history.”
“Some of the marital-status records didn’t line up either.”
I just looked at him.
“What does that mean?”
Daniel looked miserable.
