This trip should have been beautiful.
That's the first thing that matters. It was a big birthday for her. She had never traveled internationally before. She loved fashion, so Paris felt like the obvious place to start. And one of my best friends was working there, which made it all feel even more aligned. Romantic. Elevated. A real milestone trip. The kind of trip couples are supposed to remember forever for the right reasons.
And to be honest, I did not want to go.
That part is important too. Because by then, our travel history was already a mess. New York had turned into three drunken nights of chaos. Salt Lake City blew up over some random girl I had connected with on Facebook. An LA Grammy's party turned dark after she took too much Molly, nearly overdosed, and started saying three dark beings were after her. There were more. Enough that I already knew one thing for sure:
Trips with her were dangerous.
Then three days before Europe, something bizarre happened. My back completely went out. And I don't mean I tweaked it a little. I mean I could barely walk to the bathroom. I was basically crippled on the couch. It had never happened to me before. The timing was so strange it almost felt like a warning. Like my body was trying to pull the emergency brake on something my mind was still trying to be noble about. But she stepped in and helped. She did everything she could to get me moving again. Connected me with a friend who could give me pain shots. Helped me get functional enough to travel. And at the time, I thought it was sweet. I thought, look at her, taking care of me. So even though every instinct in me was hesitant, I decided I wasn't going to disappoint her. I packed the pain pills, the back brace, whatever optimism I had left, and got on the plane.
And on that flight, the first little crack appeared.
Out of nowhere, she starts showing me vitamins on her phone. Totally random. We weren't talking about supplements. We weren't talking about health. She just suddenly opens her photo album and starts scrolling. And in the middle of it, I'm almost positive I see a shirtless guy taking a mirror selfie. Just a flash. Quick. Ambiguous. Easy to doubt. One of those moments where you have to decide in real time whether to pull the pin and ruin the trip or bury it and try to be the bigger person.
So I buried it. Because I could've been wrong. And that's one of the central themes of this entire story, isn't it? The things I saw. The things I felt. The signs I kept stepping over because I wanted peace more than truth for just one more day.
But I'm now convinced it's the exact same guy she was seen "grinding on" at a club…3 days after we got home from the worst trip of my life.

At first, Paris was beautiful.
We had this insanely romantic dinner cruise on the Seine. The city looked magical. The photos were incredible. For moments at a time, it felt like the trip I had hoped for. Like maybe all the other disasters had just been bad chapters and this one would be different. Then Paris won some huge soccer championship or world title or whatever the hell it was, and the whole city turned. We had been out with my friend at a concert he was helping produce. Great night. Great energy. Then on the Uber ride home, the ETA kept climbing because the city had gone into total gridlock from all the "celebrating." So we got out and started walking with the group, thinking it would be faster. At first it felt exciting. Crowds. Noise. Energy. That charged feeling of being in the middle of a city going wild. Then it shifted. Fast. As we got closer to the main square, the mood changed from celebration to destruction. The streets started feeling hijacked. Men in ski masks. Chaos taking over. Then we got tear gassed and separated from the group.
That's one of the moments that still lives in my body.
Your eyes burning. Water pouring out of them. Can't see straight. Can't breathe right. And now you're an hour walk from your Airbnb, in a foreign city, in the middle of the night, with the woman you're supposed to protect dressed in next to nothing and the streets starting to feel lawless. It was terrifying. Not dramatic terrifying. Not movie terrifying. Real terrifying. The kind where every block feels like something bad could happen and no one is coming to help you. That was the beginning of the real wreckage.
Then came Moulin Rouge.
She had bought tickets, so we went. And somewhere around the point where there were topless performers, she started flipping out. I tried to calm it down. Told her we could leave. Told her it was fine. And we did leave, maybe thirty minutes in. That should have been the end of it. But with her, it never ended where it should have. Once we got back to the hotel, she kept going. Drinking. Pushing. Picking. By that point in the relationship, I knew the drill. When she got like that, I shut down. Not because I didn't care. Because engaging only made it worse. So I stayed calm and told her to just go to bed. Wrong answer. Of course it was "fuck that" and "fuck you," and then she started throwing things around the hotel room for what felt like half an hour. Loud enough that I thought we were going to get kicked out. Violent enough that I was ready to call the whole trip right there. Because I had one request before Europe: no excessive drinking. That was the line. The one boundary. The one simple plea. And she blew right through it. By the way, Hannah was a burlesque dancer so there's that.
But for some reason, I kept going.
The next morning we barely made our flight to Florence. I was angry. Disappointed. Shut down. The first day there was awkward and heavy, her energy all wrong, mine depleted. But eventually it softened. Florence was beautiful. We got back on track. Or at least back on some version of track where I told myself I wasn't going to ruin the trip by poking the beast. That became my role by then. Keep the peace. Manage the weather. Don't trigger the storm. And the weird thing is, my body kept reacting like it knew better than my mind. On our last day in Florence, I got the worst allergies of my life. Sneezing nonstop. Eyes watering. Just completely wrecked for no clear reason. Looking back, the whole trip felt like my system screaming while my conscious mind kept trying to act normal. Then we got to Barcelona.
I had always loved Barcelona. One of my favorite cities.
But by then I was basically a shell of myself, just trying not to set anything off. And I noticed her drinking was escalating the whole trip. What started as a glass of wine at dinner had turned into five or six. Every city, a little more. Every night, a little darker. Then came her birthday dinner. I had planned something fun. A supper club. A real celebration. And the energy was off the second we sat down. I noticed she was wearing this snake bracelet I had never seen before. Dark. Strange. Ominous. Maybe that sounds dramatic, but in that moment it felt like a symbol. Like one more clue sitting right in front of me while I tried not to see the pattern.



