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Ethan Miller, a quiet craftsman, was a phantom in his own mansion. His wife, Olivia, and daughter, Chloe, orbited Julian Vance, Olivia's charismatic college sweetheart, leaving Ethan feeling unseen and unloved, merely furniture. The call came: Chloe fell at school. Rushing there, he watched Olivia and Julian sweep past him, directly to his injured child, ignoring him completely. The rejection was instant. Chloe flinched from his touch, whimpering, "I want Julian!" Olivia publicly shamed Ethan for the accident, while Julian' s smug glances reinforced his inadequacy. Ethan was an outsider, even in his daughter's pain. Later revelations: Chloe' s "accidents" were deliberate, encouraged by Julian, confirming Ethan' s deepest fears. Was this betrayal his inescapable fate? His own daughter, groomed to reject him; his wife, a stranger to his agony. What profound flaw in him justified such calculated cruelty, his unwavering devotion constantly meaning nothing? Then came the final, crushing blows: his beloved mother' s sudden death, followed by his birthday pie – a sacred link to her love – carelessly devoured by Julian and dismissed by Olivia. Shattered, Ethan declared, "I'm done, Olivia. I want a divorce." He vowed to escape and find genuine love and a family that truly saw him.