Disclaimer: All facts gleaned from the filings stated hereafter are only as truthful as the petitioner. The tone of this article expresses a style of writing historically employed by America’s greatest writers and, as such, is for opinion purposes only. No intentional harm is due. Do not read if the topic of divorce (even your own) causes you emotional distress. Continue at your own risk.
Paperwork lands with a dull thud in St. Charles County. Names at the top: Rebekah G. Arora and Raghav Arora. A marriage logged, now challenged. The filing carries a date—in April 7, 2026, the month left unstated in the record. Sparse ink, direct claims, no ornament.
Rebekah G. Arora sets out her standing first. Residency in Missouri, long enough to meet the threshold. The same for Raghav Arora. Both tied to the same address in Lake St. Louis. The marriage traces back to April 13, 2022, registered in St. Louis County. Time passes quickly in these documents—two names moving from union to fracture in a handful of lines.
A break is marked: January 5, 2023. The separation described as constructive, the kind that signals distance without spectacle. No children from the marriage. No ongoing pregnancy. Neither party in active military service. The petition states the conclusion plainly—the marriage cannot be preserved, irretrievably broken.
Assets and debts sit in the background, acknowledged but not detailed. Each party is described as capable of self-support, able to manage fees and costs without assistance. A request appears near the end: a possible return to the name Rebekah Grace Laufer. The filing closes with a standard ask—dissolution, division, and any further relief the court finds appropriate.
The record reads like many before it—compressed, procedural, final in tone. Dates anchor the timeline, even when incomplete. What follows will move through the court’s cadence: filings, responses, orders. Not dramatic, not loud. Just the steady unwinding of a legal bond, one entry at a time.
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