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MADEA
“I want a divorce,” Jason said during dinner, and he said it with the same detached calm he might have used to comment on the weather or the taste of the food. There was no visible strain in his voice and no hesitation in his eyes. He simply looked across the table at me as though he were stating something practical and long overdue. For a moment, I truly believed I had misheard him. The words did not seem capable of belonging to this evening. The chandelier above us cast a soft amber glow across the dining room, reflecting gently off the polished cutlery and the glasses I had carefully arranged. The scent of roasted chicken seasoned with rosemary and thyme filled the air, warm and inviting. The mashed potatoes were still steaming, and the sautéed vegetables glistened lightly with butter. At the center of the table sat a chocolate cake I had baked from scratch that afternoon, slightly uneven at the edges but decorated with care. Two slender candles rested on top, waiting to be lit in celebration of five years of marriage. Everything in the room suggested love, effort, and quiet devotion. My fingers trembled around the fork I was holding, and it slipped from my grasp before I could steady it. The metallic sound of it striking the plate seemed far louder than it should have been. I lifted my eyes to Jason, searching his face for any hint that this was a cruel joke or a misunderstanding. “I am sorry,” I said carefully, forcing the words past the tightness in my throat. “What did you say?” He leaned back slightly in his chair, his posture relaxed, his expression composed. “I said I want a divorce.” There was no anger in his voice and no visible frustration. There was only certainty. That certainty was what made it unbearable. We were sitting at the same table where we had shared countless meals over the past four years. It would be five years in two months. I reached for my glass of water because my hands needed something to do. They were shaking so badly that the water trembled inside the glass. I swallowed slowly, trying to steady my breathing, but my chest felt tight and hollow at the same time. “Why?” I asked finally, even though part of me already knew the answer. “Is it because of Monalisa?” He did not look surprised that I knew her name. He did not attempt to deny it. “Yes,” he said without hesitation. The simplicity of that single word felt like a blade pressed carefully against my heart. Monalisa had always existed in the background of our marriage like a shadow that refused to fade. She was his first love, the woman he had never truly let go of. I had seen the messages that appeared on his phone late at night. I had heard the softness in his voice during certain calls. I had found photographs saved in places he thought I would never look. I had noticed, and yet I had chosen silence because I believed patience was strength and loyalty would eventually be rewarded. “I never stopped loving her,” Jason continued. “Even when we got married, my feelings for her did not disappear.” I felt heat rise to my face, followed quickly by a wave of cold that left my skin almost numb. I should have been shocked, but I was not. The truth had been sitting between us for years, unspoken but painfully present. Our marriage had not begun with romance. It had begun with obligation. His mother, Veronica Hills, had been dying of cancer when I entered their lives as her caregiver. I had sat beside her hospital bed through long nights and held her hand during treatments that drained the color from her skin. I had cleaned her when she was too weak to move and listened to her fears when she believed she would not survive the week. One evening, after I had helped her take her medication, she looked at me with tear-filled eyes and said that any man would be lucky to have me. She asked why I would not consider marrying her son. I had laughed nervously at the time because the idea seemed absurd. I barely knew Jason, and he barely looked at me as anything more than the woman assisting his mother. I refused at first because I did not want to enter a marriage built on gratitude or obligation. However, she pleaded with me. She said it would give her peace before she died. She said she wanted to know her son would not be alone in the world. Against my better judgment and against the quiet instinct inside me that warned me this would end badly, I agreed. Somewhere along the way, I fell in love with him. I fell in love with the small things, like the way he frowned when concentrating or the rare softness in his voice when he was tired. I believed that love could grow through proximity and shared years. I believed that if I gave enough, he would eventually give back. Now he was telling me that he had never truly given himself at all. “I do not owe you an explanation,” he said, his voice firmer now. “I am telling you because I want this handled quickly and cleanly. I want out.” The words stung, but what hurt more was the calmness with which he said them. It was as though leaving me required no emotional effort. “Fine,” I said quietly. He looked at me with mild surprise, clearly expecting tears or anger. I felt both, but I refused to let them control me. “You never wanted this marriage,” I continued. “You only agreed to it because your mother asked you to.” He did not deny that either. “Now that she is gone, there is nothing holding you here,” I said, and my voice felt steadier than I expected. He nodded once. “I will have my lawyer prepare the papers.” I looked at the food growing cold on the table and at the cake that would never have its candles lit. The delightful dinner I had prepared for so carefully had dissolved into something unrecognizable. “I will sign the papers,” I said slowly. “I will not make this difficult for you.” He visibly relaxed at that, relief softening his features. “But I have one condition.” He let out a short, humorless laugh. “Madea, you are not in a position to make demands.” “I am not making a demand,” I replied calmly. “I am asking for something you owe me after all this years.” His expression hardened. “I do not owe you anything.” The cruelty of that statement settled heavily in my chest. Years of loyalty, patience, and quiet endurance meant nothing to him. I had protected his reputation. I had respected his grief. I had pretended not to see the ways he emotionally abandoned me long before tonight. “You may not owe me love,” I said evenly, “but you owe me dignity.” He did not interrupt me this time. “I deserve at least one honest gesture before this ends,” I continued. “If you want a divorce, then you will give me something first.” He folded his arms and looked at me with skepticism. “And what exactly is that?” I met his gaze steadily, even though my heart was racing inside my chest. I felt hurt, yes, but I also felt something stronger rising beneath the pain. I refused to leave this marriage as a footnote in his life. I refused to be remembered as an obligation he endured. The room was quiet except for the faint ticking of the clock on the wall. The candles on the cake remained unlit between us. “Marry me,” I said.MADEAI didn't make it to the door. I felt her hand catch the fabric of my sleeve, a sharp tug that spun me around to face the storm. Cassendra’s face was contorted, her eyes wide with a manic kind of triumph. She wasn't just angry; she was enjoying the hunt."Don't you dare walk away from me when I’m speaking to you!" she hissed, her breath warm and smelling of bitter tea. "You think silence makes you superior? It just makes you a coward. You’re a ghost in this house, Madea. A ghost haunting a man who stopped loving you a long time ago."I felt the last thread of my restraint snap. It wasn't a loud break—it was silent and cold. "Is that what this is about?" I whispered, my voice finally finding a lethal edge. I stepped closer, forcing her to either recoil or stand her ground. "You’ve spent years whispering in his ear, trying to carve me out of his life like I’m a cancer. Tell me, Cassendra, does it keep you up at night? Knowing that even if he leaves me tomorrow, he’ll still never
MADEA "I know, Madea. I know you deserve better." I raised my head, the movement feeling heavy, as if my neck could barely support the weight of my own grief. I stared at him, my vision blurring for a split second before I hardened my gaze. "What do you know about what I deserve?" I asked. My voice didn't shake, but it felt hollow, like an echo in an empty room. I let out a sharp, jagged scoff. "Really? You don’t know the first thing about me. So, please... excuse me." "Madea, don’t go," he pleaded. The sound of my name on his lips felt like a bruise. I ignored him, turning on my heel and walking out into the humid air. Every step felt like I was wading through deep water. As the taxi hummed toward home, my mind was a chaotic loop of paranoia. *Who told him?* The humiliation tasted like copper in the back of my throat. Was our misery that loud? Was the rot in my marriage so visible that a man could fly across the ocean from Africa and smell the decay the moment he landed? I
MADEA "What are you saying, Matt?" My voice came out quieter than I intended. I hated that. I cleared my throat and tried again. "What do you know?" He didn't flinch. He just looked at me the way someone looks at you when they've already made up their mind and are simply waiting for you to catch up. The patience of it made my skin crawl. "Have you been following me?" The suspicion was out before I could stop it. "Answer me. Have you been following me?" "I—" He started, then something stopped him. His jaw tightened. He glanced away, then back, and let out a slow breath. "Madea." His voice had dropped into something careful, something almost tender. "I want you. That's enough." The room didn't change. People were still moving around us, glasses still clinking somewhere behind me, conversation still humming low in the air. Everything exactly as it had been thirty seconds ago. Like the ground hadn't just shifted under my feet. I stared at him. "I am married, Matt." "I know." Some
MADEA "Emmh—" I swallowed, taking his hands off me and reaching for my bag. "I think I should go." Matt set down his fork. "You just got here," he said, his voice low, careful. "I was here before you," I stated, already looking around for the waiter. I really should go. I really, really should. "But you haven't finished your meal." He gestured toward my plate, his eyes not leaving my face. "I know that too." I pushed my plate slightly forward like it was the problem. Like the food was what was making it hard to breathe in this restaurant. "I just need to go, Matt." "Madea—" He reached across the table. "Please don't." I pulled my hand back before he could reach it. Then I tried to stand, but my body wasn't cooperating — my legs felt like they belonged to someone else. He was already on his feet, reaching out to steady me, and somehow I fell right into his hands. Warm. He was still so warm. My eyes fixed on his and something in my chest did a terrible, treacherous thing. *What
MONALISA "Jealous?" Jason said, sliding his arm around my waist with the particular smugness of a man who knew exactly what he was doing. Aaron's expression didn't change but his eyes did. Just slightly. "Of what exactly?" "Oh don't," I said quickly, already seeing where Jason was taking it. But Jason was already warming up. "Of this," he gestured loosely between us. "Of love. Of what we have. Of the fact that some people in this room are deeply, spiritually, and romantically fulfilled and others are—" "Jason," I said. He looked at me. Relaxed. Almost entertained. "I'm just painting a picture." I stared at him for a moment. Something moved through me — not the explosive kind of anger that makes you raise your voice and say things you regret. No. This was quieter than that. Colder. The kind that starts in your stomach and rises slowly until it settles right behind your eyes. "Put the brush down." He tilted his head slightly, like he was considering whether I was
MONALISA "Aaron?" I blinked. "What are you doing here?" Aaron stood there with that signature grin of his, hands in his pockets, completely at ease. that was the way he always was, like he had never been caught off guard a day in his life. He was Jason best buddy and never like Madea for him so he supported our relationship from the start. More reason I liked him. " Don't worry I will make sure Jason stays with only you." He has assured me one time we hang out together. Him, Jason and I. And till now he had somehow managed to kept to the promise. I turned to Jason, who had the decency to look at least slightly guilty, his eyes sliding away from mine just a second too late. "You knew he was coming?" "I called him," Jason admitted, rubbing the back of his neck. I stared at him for a moment then looked back at Aaron. Something clicked. "How is that possible?" I said, my eyes fixed on Jason. "I have been with you all along.". Jason held my gaze without blinking. "Yes."
MADEA I stood in the sitting room, waiting for Jason to grab his keys, my hands loosely clasped in front of me as a quiet tension settled into the space between us. The silence felt unnatural—too heavy, too stretched—as though something unspoken was slowly suffocating the room. My phone buzze
MADEA I stood frozen, unsure how to react. My stomach twisted, my chest tight, and my fingers stiff at my sides. What did you expect, Madea? The thought echoed bitterly in my mind. I let out a hollow laugh—sharp, dry, tasting faintly of regret. It trembled in my throat, betraying the anger an
MONALISA Jason returned after a while, and the moment I saw him, something inside my chest tightened, sharp and unyielding, like ice had wrapped itself around my ribs. He had been gone just to get towels—but had he really gone? Or had something… someone else held his attention longer than necessa
MADEA Not long after Jason returned with the ice, he didn’t even glance at me. His eyes were fixed on Monalisa, soft and tender in a way they had never been for me. My chest tightened, sharp and cold, and my throat felt raw, as if I’d swallowed broken glass. “I’m sorry, babe,” he murmured, le







