The first crack appeared on a Tuesday morning in March, when I found Tyler’s phone buzzing against the marble countertop at 5:47 a.m. Not unusual—except he was still asleep beside me, and the message preview read: Can’t wait to see you today, handsome.
My fingers hovered over the screen. In twenty-three years of marriage, I’d never once invaded his privacy. Trust had been our foundation, our unspoken agreement.
But something cold slithered through my chest as I watched that message disappear, replaced by his usual alarm at six sharp.
“Morning, beautiful,” Tyler mumbled, reaching for his phone with practiced casualness. His thumb swiped the screen clean before I could blink.
“Sleep well?”
“Like a rock,” I lied, studying his face for tells I’d never needed to look for before.
He smiled—the same boyish grin that had charmed me in college. But something felt rehearsed about it now, like he was performing rather than simply being.
Three days later, as I gathered clothes for dry cleaning, a restaurant receipt fell from his jacket pocket.
Shay Lauron. Thursday evening.
I remembered Thursday clearly because I’d made his favorite pot roast and eaten alone again.
The receipt showed two entrées, two glasses of wine, one shared dessert—the kind of intimate dinner we hadn’t had in months. My hands trembled as I held the thin paper, imagining Tyler across from someone who wasn’t me, sharing crème brûlée while I scraped his untouched dinner into Tupperware containers.
The betrayal felt physical. A sharp twist beneath my ribs that stole my breath.
“Find anything interesting?” Tyler’s voice from the doorway made me jump.
I turned, the receipt still clutched in my palm.
For a moment, we stared at each other across the chasm that had somehow opened in our bedroom. His eyes flicked to my hand, and I watched his jaw tighten almost imperceptibly.
“Just gathering your dry cleaning,” I said, my voice surprisingly steady.
He nodded slowly, but his gaze never left my face.
“Thanks. You’re always taking such good care of me.”
The words felt like mockery, though his tone remained gentle. I wanted to throw the receipt at him, demand explanations, fight for what we’d built together.
Instead, I smiled and tucked it into my pocket.
“Of course, honey. That’s what wives do.”
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