Food kept vanishing from Christine’s home — first chocolates, then entire meals. When her husband, Samuel, swore he wasn’t the culprit, she set up a hidden camera. When she spotted the intruder on the footage, her blood ran cold.
At first, it was just little things disappearing from my fridge and kitchen cabinets. A handful of chocolates missing from the box I’d been saving. The juice boxes Samuel loved, running out faster than usual.
Each time something disappeared, I’d do a mental inventory, trying to remember if I’d eaten it myself in some late-night fog. But I knew my habits. I could make a box of chocolates last for weeks, savoring one piece at a time.
Not the type to devour half a box and forget about it. Still, I tried to rationalize it. Maybe Samuel was sneaking midnight snacks.
Maybe I was working too hard, losing track of things. But then the incidents started escalating. A bottle of wine we’d been saving for our anniversary — the one I specifically remembered pushing to the back of the cabinet — suddenly appeared in the recycling bin.
The fancy cheese I’d bought for our dinner party was half-gone before the guests even arrived. Each disappearance felt like a tiny paper cut to my sanity. I started keeping a log.
Monday: half a box of imported cookies missing. Wednesday: three pieces of dark chocolate were gone. Friday: the special raspberry preserves I’d ordered online were nowhere to be found.
The pattern was maddening, not just because things were disappearing, but because of what was being taken. These weren’t random snacks or plain food — they were all the premium items, the special treats, the things I’d carefully chosen and looked forward to enjoying. Then the caviar disappeared.
Not the cheap stuff either, the premium Osetra I’d splurged on for Samuel’s birthday. $200 worth of tiny black pearls, gone without a trace. That was the final straw.
Although it was out of character, the only logical explanation was that my husband had been snacking in secret. I had to confront him if I was ever going to get to the bottom of this mystery. “Hey, babe,” I said one morning, trying to keep my voice casual.
“Did you finish that box of Belgian truffles I bought last week?”
Samuel looked up from his coffee, forehead creasing. “What truffles?”
My stomach did a weird little flip. “The ones on the top shelf of the pantry.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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