When my husband, Brian Whitaker, told me he wanted a divorce, there were no tears, no hesitation, not even a trace of guilt. He stood in our kitchen in Arlington, Virginia, holding the coffee mug I had given him for our tenth anniversary, and said the words as casually as if he were canceling a cable subscription. “I want the house, the cars, the savings, the furniture, everything except our son.”
For a second, I honestly thought I had heard him wrong. Our son, Mason, was eight. He collected baseball cards, adored grilled cheese sandwiches, and insisted on keeping his bedroom light on when he slept. Every time he heard his father’s truck pull into the driveway, he still ran straight to the door. And Brian was calmly declaring he wanted every asset we had built together—but not the boy who loved him.
The following day, I sat across from my divorce attorney, Dana Mercer, repeating Brian’s demand. Dana had handled plenty of ugly divorces, but even she seemed unsettled. “Claire, listen carefully,” she said. “You need to fight this. The house alone is worth nearly a million. The vehicles, the accounts, his business interest—we cannot just hand all of this over.”
But I remained calm, calmer than I had been in months. “Give him what he wants,” I said.
Dana leaned forward. “He’s trying to leave you with nothing.”
By the time Brian walked into the final court hearing wearing his navy suit, he looked like a man heading toward victory. I looked exactly like the image he wanted the judge to see: an exhausted wife surrendering everything. When the settlement papers were placed in front of me, I signed away the house, the cars, and every major asset without hesitation.