
After I Saw My Husband Kiss His Mistress
Chapter 2
I'd been keeping track of Michael's movements for three nights now, marking each departure and return in a small notebook I'd hidden in my art supplies. The pattern was becoming clear, like the slow emergence of an image on canvas—first just shapes and shadows, then the unmistakable truth.
Tonight was no different. From our bedroom window, I watched as he backed his car out of the driveway at 8:17 PM. He paused at the end of our street, the interior light briefly illuminating his profile as he checked something on his phone. Then he did something curious—he pulled a cloth from the glove compartment and wiped his windshield from the inside, as though clearing evidence of where he'd been or where he was going.
"Client emergency," he'd said casually over dinner, not quite meeting my eyes. "Shouldn't be too late."
I'd nodded, offering the same understanding smile I'd perfected over years of supporting his career. The same smile I now wore like a mask while my heart splintered beneath it.
After he disappeared around the corner, I returned to my sketchbook, but the lines I drew were jagged and angry, nothing like the delicate botanical studies I usually created. I couldn't focus. The silence of our home—once comforting—now seemed to echo with unspoken betrayals.
Morning arrived with no sign of Michael. I'd fallen asleep on the couch sometime after midnight, my sketchbook still open on my lap. The sound of his key in the lock woke me at 1:43 AM. I quickly closed my eyes, steadying my breathing as he entered.
He moved quietly through the living room, pausing near the couch. I felt his presence, sensed his hesitation. Then the gentle weight of a throw blanket settled over me—a gesture of tenderness that made my throat tighten with confusion. How could the same hands that caressed another woman still perform such acts of care?
"Grace?" he whispered, so softly I almost didn't hear.
I kept my breathing even, unable to face him in that moment. After a few seconds, he sighed and moved away, his footsteps fading toward our bedroom.
The next morning, I was making coffee when Michael's phone rang. He was in the shower—again, his phone left vulnerable. I glanced at the screen: "R."
Rebecca.
The call went to voicemail, but moments later, as I stirred cream into my coffee, his phone chimed with a text. I didn't look this time. I didn't need to.
When Michael emerged from the bathroom, already dressed for work in the charcoal suit I'd helped him select last month, he grabbed his phone and stepped onto our small balcony, sliding the door closed behind him. But the glass didn't quite muffle his voice.
"No, it's later tonight," he said, his tone hushed but unmistakably warm. Then came a laugh—intimate, playful, a sound I hadn't heard directed at me in months. "I know... I can't wait either."
The coffee cup nearly slipped from my fingers. I set it down carefully, focusing on the dark liquid rippling inside rather than the nausea rising in my throat.
Later that afternoon, while Michael was at work, I found myself standing in his home office, not entirely sure what I was looking for. Evidence, perhaps. Or maybe just confirmation that I wasn't losing my mind.
His desk was meticulously organized—client folders arranged by priority, a stack of business cards, his laptop closed and centered perfectly on the blotter. I opened the top drawer: pens, paper clips, sticky notes. Nothing unusual.
Then I noticed the edge of a paper peeking out from beneath the desk, as if it had been hastily shoved underneath. I knelt down and retrieved it—a crumpled receipt from Tiffany & Co., dated two nights ago. A pendant necklace, platinum with a small diamond. $875.00.
My birthday had passed months ago. Our anniversary wasn't until spring. And there had been no special gift presented to me in recent memory.
I smoothed the receipt against my palm, the paper crinkling softly under my fingers. The evidence I'd been searching for, concrete and undeniable. Yet instead of clarity, I felt only a deepening hollowness, as if I were becoming a ghost in my own life.
I carefully returned the receipt exactly where I'd found it and left the office, closing the door silently behind me. The question wasn't whether Michael was having an affair anymore.
The question was what I was going to do about it.
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