On the third day of my honeymoon, my husband sent me away to a luxury spa because he said he “needed space.” Three hours later, I came back to

My name is Elena Whitmore, and four days before that moment, I had stood in a white dress in Santa Barbara, California, in front of three hundred guests, believing I had just married the love of my life.

Leonardo cried during his vows.

My father cried in the front row.

I cried too, like a fool, because I thought life had finally handed me the kind of love story women spend years praying for.

We flew to Malibu for our honeymoon and checked into a private oceanfront villa that cost more per night than my first car.

The bedroom opened to a terrace above the Pacific.

There were white curtains, fresh flowers, champagne on ice, and a view so beautiful it almost felt fake.

For the first two days, Leonardo acted like the man I had married.

He held my hand on the beach.

He called me “my wife” in that proud little voice that made my stomach flutter.

He kissed my shoulder while I made coffee and told me I looked even prettier without makeup.

Then, on the third morning, everything changed.

We were sitting on the terrace in matching white robes, with the ocean shining below us and a tray of untouched fruit between us.

My wedding ring still felt new on my finger.

Leonardo had barely looked at me all morning.

Finally, he set down his coffee and said, “I think you should go to the spa retreat today.”

I smiled because I thought he was surprising me.

Then I saw his face.

He was not excited.

He looked annoyed.

“What do you mean?” I asked.

He leaned back in his chair and sighed like I had already become a burden.

“I just need a little space.”

The word hit me harder than yelling would have.

Space.

From me.

On our honeymoon.

I pulled my silk robe tighter around myself.

“Leonardo, we just got married.”

“I know.”

“This is our honeymoon.”

“Exactly,” he said, rubbing his forehead. “We’ve been together nonstop. I feel suffocated.”

Suffocated.

By the woman he had married four days earlier.

I stared at him, waiting for him to laugh, to tell me he had chosen the wrong word, to reach for my hand and apologize.

He did none of those things.

Instead, he slid a folded brochure across the table.

“I booked you three days at a luxury wellness retreat in Ojai. Massages, yoga, gourmet meals, private suite, everything included.”

I looked at the brochure like it was written in another language.