“I was the wife of a billionaire, but my shoes had holes in them. My hundred-dollar monthly allowance-the price for my family's million-dollar debt-had vanished on necessities. When I asked my husband, Jason, for a new pair, he told me not to bother him with trifles. Minutes later, a notification popped up on my phone. He had just donated fifty million dollars to a museum wing named after his ex-girlfriend. Then came the group chat from his circle of friends. "I heard Florence only gets a $100 allowance," one wife wrote. "My dog eats better than that!" Fifty million for another woman while I was being compared to a pet. The humiliation was a physical blow, and I realized he wasn't just stingy; he was actively trying to break me. But something inside me refused to shatter. I scrolled through my phone until I found the discreet ad I was looking for, a place whispered about by desperate women: "Elysian Fields." This wasn't about shoes anymore. This was about freedom. I pressed the call button.”