When Jake said we should move to Alaska to finally save money and build our future, I said yes without hesitation. I thought we were partners. I thought we had a plan.
What I didn’t know was that Jake had his own plan all along. One that didn’t include me.
I’m Chloe. 25. I had my life mostly together—small house in South Carolina, steady work as a freelance designer. My mom had moved to Alaska years earlier, but I stayed behind and built a life with Jake, who moved in after two years of dating.
At first, it was cozy, domestic bliss. But after Jake quit his job and went eight months without work — under the excuse of “finding his passion” — things shifted. I paid the bills, handled the groceries, kept the house running while he played video games and dabbled in crypto.
And I kept telling myself: this is temporary. He’ll get back on his feet.
Then one night, in the middle of cooking dinner, Jake turned off the stove, grabbed my hands, and proposed — without a ring, but full of promises.
I said yes. Because I loved him. Because I believed him.
A few weeks later, my mom visited. She offered us something that felt like divine intervention:
Move to Alaska. Live rent-free with her. Take high-paying seasonal jobs. Save $50K each in two years. Enough for a wedding, a house, a fresh start.
Jake lit up. He jumped on the idea. We were finally building our future.
Or so I thought.
We spent months planning. The night before we were set to fly out, my girlfriends insisted on a goodbye trip. “Your last hurrah before Alaska,” they said.
I returned early, eager to spend our final night together.
But when I opened the door, something was off.
My boxes — not Jake’s — were neatly packed by the front door.
He was sitting on the couch, watching TV like nothing was unusual.
“What’s going on?” I asked.
He muted the TV. “Yeah… so… I’ve changed my mind. I’m not going.”
I stood there frozen, not comprehending.
“You should still go,” he continued. “Alaska’s more your thing anyway. I’ll figure things out here.”
And then — I swear — the bathroom door opened.
Out walked a girl I’d never seen before, wearing one of Jake’s t-shirts. “Oh, hi! You must be Chloe. I’m Maddie.”
I was too stunned to speak. He sat there like this was the most natural thing in the world.
“This is Maddie. My girlfriend now,” Jake said, casually.
That’s when it clicked.
Jake had never planned to move to Alaska. He used it to get me out. To move his new girlfriend into MY house — my late mother’s house.
And he wasn’t even apologetic. “Look, you get your Alaska adventure. I get to stay here. It works out for everyone.”
Except me.
I left that night. No screaming. No tears. Just silent rage.
I called my mom from the airport. She said the words I didn’t know I needed to hear: “I’m proud of you for walking away.”
I flew to Alaska alone. And for the first time in months, I could breathe.
The best part? My friends back home handled the rest. Brandon and Leo drove down, packed Jake and Maddie’s things into a U-Haul, changed the locks, and sent me one photo: my house, finally free of them.
That photo still makes me smile.
In Alaska, I worked hard. I fished, I hunted, I saved. I healed.
And then I met Nate. Steady, kind, thoughtful Nate. No big promises — just quiet, consistent love. We bought a house together two years later. A real partnership.
Jake? I don’t know what happened to him. I don’t need to.
Because sometimes, rock bottom is exactly where you find your new beginning.
Alaska didn’t save me.
I saved me.