Divorced, my husband threw an old pillow at me with a look of disdain — but when I opened it to wash it, I froze at what I found inside…
Héctor and I had been married for five years. From the very first day I became his wife, I grew used to his cold words and distant looks. Héctor was never violent, never shouted — but his indifference made my heart wither a little more each day.
After the wedding, we lived with his parents in a neighborhood in Mexico City. Every morning, I woke up early to cook, wash, and clean. Every evening, I sat and waited for him, only to hear the same words:
—“I already ate.”
I often wondered if being married was any different from being a tenant. I tried to build something, tried to love him, but all I ever received in return was an invisible emptiness I couldn’t fill.
Then one day, Héctor came home with that same expressionless face. He sat down across from me, handed me divorce papers, and said flatly:
—“Sign them. I don’t want to waste either of our time anymore.”
I froze. My eyes filled with tears as I took the pen with trembling hands. Memories rushed through me — nights I waited for him to come home, dinners gone cold, the times I lay awake sick and alone while he slept soundly beside me. Each memory cut deeper than the last.
After signing, I began packing my things. There was almost nothing in that house that was truly mine — just some clothes and an old pillow I always slept with. As I was about to walk out with my suitcase, Héctor tossed the pillow at me with a sarcastic smirk.
—“Take it and wash it. It’s probably falling apart already.”
I held the pillow against my chest, my throat tightening. It was old — the cover faded and yellowed, worn thin at the edges. It was the pillow I’d brought from my mother’s house in a small town in Oaxaca when I moved to the city for college. I had kept it even after getting married because I couldn’t sleep without it. Héctor once complained about it, but I didn’t care.
I left that house in silence.
In my small rented room, I sat staring at the pillow, numb. Thinking of his cruel words, I decided to wash it — at least it would be clean, and maybe I could sleep without dreams of pain that night.
But as I unzipped the cover, something felt strange. There was a hard lump inside the soft cotton stuffing. I reached in — and froze. There was a small bundle of paper wrapped carefully in a plastic bag. My hands trembled as I opened it.
Inside was a stack of 500-peso bills — and a folded piece of paper.
It was my mother’s handwriting.
“My dear daughter,
This is the money I saved for you, in case you ever go through hard times.
I hid it inside your pillow because I knew you might be too proud to accept it if I gave it to you directly.
No matter what happens, don’t suffer for a man, my girl.
I love you, always.
—Mom.”
Tears spilled onto the faded paper. I remembered my wedding day — how my mother had given me that same pillow, saying it was extra soft, so I’d sleep well.
I laughed then and told her, “You’re getting sentimental, Mom. Don’t worry — Héctor and I will be happy.”
She just smiled, her eyes distant and sad.
Now, clutching that pillow to my chest, I felt as if she were right there beside me, stroking my hair, telling me everything would be okay. She had always known how deeply a daughter could suffer after choosing the wrong man. And she had left me not riches, but a quiet safety net — something to remind me that I was never alone.
That night, I lay on the hard bed of my small rented room, hugging the pillow as tears soaked the fabric. But this time, I wasn’t crying for Héctor.
I cried for my mother.
For her love.
For the realization that I was still lucky — because I still had somewhere to return to, a mother who loved me, and a whole world waiting outside.
The next morning, I woke early, folded the pillow carefully, and placed it in my suitcase. I told myself I’d find a smaller room closer to work, send more money to my mother, and build a life where I no longer had to tremble or wait for cold, empty words.
I smiled at my reflection in the mirror.
The woman with swollen eyes would, from that day on, live for herself — for her aging mother, and for the dreams she still carried inside her heart.
That marriage, that old pillow, that cruel smirk — they were only the ending of one sad chapter.
As for my life — there were still so many pages left to write, with my own hands and my resilient heart.
News
They Stripped Me Nearly Naked in Front of 50 Guests to Humiliate Me… But They Made the Biggest Mistake of Their Lives by Not Knowing Who My Father Really Was
Built from the humiliation-and-revenge setup you provided here , here’s a full English, U.S.-market dramatic version in second person with…
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