Eden Hart has learned to measure rooms by the size of the door. Seven years into a marriage where control is called protection and violence is called love, one small word-blueberries-becomes Eden's exit key. Leaving isn't a moment; it's a map. With the help of a local advocacy center and a few brave friends, Eden begins the slow work of paperwork, locks, boundaries, and telling her body it's safe to breathe.
Told in a braided Then/After structure, The Alibi of Love traces the escalation of coercive control alongside the unglamorous courage of starting over. A mother who once stayed urges her daughter to keep the peace; a church wants reconciliation more than truth; a brother decides what repair actually means. And when a gentle neighbor named Theo appears-with thirty steps and a "stop if you say yellow"-Eden must learn a new language for ordinary, consent, and joy that doesn't apologize.
For readers of contemporary women's fiction that holds both ache and hope, The Alibi of Love is about the work of leaving-and the holiness of staying gone.
Content note: contains depictions of domestic abuse and coercive control; handled with care and resources included.