/My Husband Couldn’t Stop Helping His Ex—Until I Showed Up with a Wrench and a Warning

My Husband Couldn’t Stop Helping His Ex—Until I Showed Up with a Wrench and a Warning


When I met Henry at a bookstore, we both reached for the same copy of The Great Gatsby. Five years into our marriage, I still thought I’d found a romantic. But gradually, things started to shift.

It began innocently enough—his ex-wife Liz needed help with a broken sink. Then it was a leaky shower. A squeaky garage door. A crooked cabinet. Every week, it was something new. Every week, Henry was gone—toolbox in hand, dinner forgotten, anniversary plans postponed.

At first, I gave him grace. “She’s just helpless,” he’d say. “She has no one else.” Meanwhile, our own home repairs went untouched. A faucet dripped endlessly. Paint peeled. He was always fixing her problems—never ours.

Then came the night Liz called about a “kitchen flood.”
“I’m coming with you,” I said.
Henry paused—longer than he should’ve—then agreed.

When we got to Liz’s house, she greeted us in a silk robe, lips painted red. Her smile faltered when she saw me.
“Oh,” she blinked. “Didn’t know you were bringing company.”
“Surprise,” I smiled.

The kitchen was pristine—except for one carefully placed puddle beneath the sink. Henry knelt down. Before Liz could reach for a tool, I handed him the wrench myself.

Then I turned to her and held out a folded note.
“What’s this?” she asked.
“A list of professionals,” I said. “Plumbers. Electricians. And a dating app—just in case.”
At the bottom, I’d written:
If you keep calling my husband, I’ll assume you can’t read.

Her face flushed.
“You think this is about plumbing?” she snapped.
“No,” I said. “It’s about boundaries.”

On the way home, I handed Henry a divorce lawyer’s card.
“Not a threat,” I said. “A choice.”

He sat in silence for a long time before finally saying, “I’ll call her tomorrow. I’ll tell her I can’t be her handyman anymore.”

And he did.

It’s been three months. My faucet is fixed. Liz hasn’t called again. Last I heard, she’s dating someone—one of the professionals on my list. Handy. Single.

As for Henry? He still has his toolbox. But now, it only opens for me.

Ayera Bint-e

Ayera Bint‑e has quickly established herself as one of the most compelling voices at USA Popular News. Known for her vivid storytelling and deep insight into human emotions, she crafts narratives that resonate far beyond the page.