
After I Saw My Husband Kiss His Mistress
Chapter 1
I found it by accident. Or maybe some part of me had been searching all along.
Michael's phone pinged while he was in the shower. A casual glance at the screen turned into something else entirely when I noticed a notification from a photo app I'd never seen him use. He'd always been protective of his phone lately—a new habit I'd quietly cataloged along with the late nights at the office and the sudden work emergencies that pulled him away on weekends.
The bathroom door was closed, steam curling beneath it. The shower still running. My fingers moved before my mind could catch up.
The first few photos were innocuous—downtown Portland skylines, a coffee shop I didn't recognize, a sunset over the Willamette. Then I swiped again and my breath caught in my throat.
A woman. Young—mid-twenties maybe. Honey-blonde hair falling in loose waves around a heart-shaped face. Her smile was radiant, confident. She was looking up at the camera with an intimacy that made my stomach clench. Her hand was stretched toward the photographer—toward Michael—fingers just visible at the edge of the frame.
I clicked on the photo information. Rebecca Thompson. Taken three weeks ago.
Rebecca.
I'd never heard Michael mention that name. Not once in our eight years together.
The shower squeaked off. I quickly closed the app and placed the phone exactly where I'd found it, my hands trembling slightly. When Michael emerged with a towel wrapped around his waist, water droplets clinging to his shoulders, I was sitting on the edge of the bed, scrolling through my own phone as if nothing had changed.
"Morning, beautiful," he said, leaning down to kiss my forehead. The familiar scent of his soap wrapped around me, suddenly suffocating.
"Morning," I managed, my voice steadier than I felt. "Sleep well?"
"Like a rock. You?"
I nodded, not trusting myself to speak again. As he dressed for work, I watched him through new eyes. This man who had been my college sweetheart, my husband, my supposed soulmate for eight years—suddenly a stranger.
He slipped the phone into his pocket without checking it.
* * *
I wasn't planning to follow him. At least, that's what I told myself as I sat in the Rainy Day Café across from Barlow, the trendy farm-to-table restaurant Michael had mentioned having a "client dinner" at tonight. The rain tapped gently against the window, distorting the lights of downtown Portland into watery smears of color.
I'd ordered a chai latte I couldn't taste, my eyes fixed on the restaurant entrance. Just to know. Just to be sure. Maybe there was an explanation. Maybe Rebecca was a client, a colleague, a friend's sister. Maybe I was overreacting.
Then I saw him, stepping out of a cab, adjusting his tie—the blue one I'd given him last Christmas. He checked his watch, then the restaurant entrance, an anticipatory smile playing at his lips. A smile I recognized from our early days, when he used to wait for me outside my art history lectures.
She appeared moments later, hurrying through the rain without an umbrella. Rebecca Thompson in the flesh, more vibrant than her photo. She wore a fitted emerald dress that caught the streetlights as she moved. When she spotted Michael, her face lit up with unrestrained joy.
I pressed my palm against the cool window as if I could reach through it, stop what was about to happen. Michael stepped forward, meeting her halfway. His hands found her waist with practiced familiarity. Then he leaned down and kissed her—not a polite greeting, not a friendly peck—but a lover's kiss, deep and passionate, oblivious to the rain or passersby or the fact that his wife of eight years was watching from twenty feet away.
Something inside me cracked open. I felt it physically, like a hairline fracture spreading across glass. I couldn't move, couldn't breathe, couldn't look away as they broke apart, laughing about the rain, his arm around her shoulders as they disappeared into the restaurant.
* * *
"I brought wine," Michael announced, closing our front door behind him at 10:37 PM. His cheeks were flushed from the cold or the alcohol or both. "That Pinot you like from Willamette Valley."
I looked up from my sketchbook, where I'd been mindlessly drawing the same curved line over and over for hours. "That's thoughtful."
"How was your evening?" he asked, shrugging off his coat. The same coat that had sheltered Rebecca from the rain earlier.
"Quiet. Just sketching." The lie came easily, wrapped in a half-truth. "How was your client dinner?"
"Productive." He loosened his tie—that blue tie—and crossed the room to kiss me. "Boring business talk. You would have hated it."
His lips felt the same. That was the most bewildering part. The man who had kissed another woman with such passion just hours ago could still kiss me with such convincing tenderness.
"You're cold," I said, pulling back slightly.
"It's pouring out there." He smiled, tucking a strand of hair behind my ear with familiar affection. "I missed you tonight."
In our bedroom later, Michael fell asleep quickly, one arm draped across my waist in the same position we'd slept in for years. I stared at the ceiling, replaying the kiss I'd witnessed, wondering if our entire marriage had been built on a foundation as insubstantial as rain.
Beside me, Michael murmured something in his sleep. I couldn't make out the words, but for the first time in our eight years together, I wondered who he was dreaming about.
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