
After My Husband Loved Another Woman
Chapter 1
I arranged the tenth pancake carefully on Tyler's birthday stack, my fingers trembling slightly as I positioned the blue candles in the shape of a number ten. The morning light streamed through our kitchen windows, casting a warm glow across the marble countertop I'd once been so proud of. Now it just felt like another piece of the perfect life that was slowly crumbling around me.
"Tyler! Breakfast is ready, birthday boy!" I called up the stairs, injecting as much cheer into my voice as I could muster.
Michael's phone rang for the third time that morning. I watched his face light up as he checked the caller ID, that familiar spark in his eyes that had once been reserved for me—for us.
"Rebecca," he murmured, as if her name alone was an excuse to step away from our family breakfast. "I need to take this."
I bit my tongue as he slipped into the hallway, his voice dropping to that intimate tone he never used with me anymore. Tyler's footsteps thundered down the stairs, and I forced a smile onto my face, determined not to let my son see the fractures.
"Mom! Did Dad remember?" Tyler's eyes, so much like Michael's, scanned the kitchen hopefully.
"Of course he did, sweetheart. He's just on a call." The lie tasted bitter on my tongue. Michael had barely acknowledged what day it was when he'd rolled out of bed, checking his phone before even looking at me.
Tyler slid into his chair, eyeing the towering stack of pancakes with genuine delight. At least I could still give him this—small moments of normalcy and joy, even as our family was being systematically dismantled by a woman I'd never met and a child who wasn't ours.
Michael returned, sliding his phone into his pocket with practiced casualness. "Happy birthday, champ," he said, ruffling Tyler's hair with distracted affection.
"Are we still going to celebrate tonight, Dad? You promised we could have a special dinner, just us." Tyler's voice held such hope that it made my chest ache.
Michael's eyes flickered to his watch, then to his phone as it buzzed with a text. "About that... Madison has her figure skating competition today. It's really important to her."
I watched Tyler's face fall, then quickly rearrange itself into understanding. Always understanding. Always accommodating his father's increasing absences and broken promises.
"But," Michael added, clearly sensing the tension in the room, "I'll be back in time for cake. We'll celebrate then, okay? Promise."
Tyler's face brightened immediately. "Really? You promise?"
"Cross my heart," Michael said, making the gesture without meeting either of our eyes. "Now I've got to run. Rebecca and Madison are waiting."
He was gone before Tyler had taken his third bite of pancake, the front door closing with a finality that echoed through our too-quiet house.
"He'll be back," I reassured Tyler, squeezing his shoulder. "I have something for you while we wait."
I retrieved the carefully wrapped package from my hiding spot in the pantry. It had taken weeks of saving, of skimming small amounts from the grocery budget that Michael increasingly scrutinized. The box was heavier than it looked, wrapped in paper decorated with superheroes—Tyler's latest obsession.
"For me?" Tyler's eyes widened as I placed it before him.
"Every birthday boy needs a special gift from his mom," I said, watching as he tore into the wrapping with the pure, uncomplicated joy that only children can muster.
The ice skates gleamed under the kitchen lights. They weren't new—I couldn't afford new—but I'd spent hours refurbishing them, replacing the laces, polishing the blades until they shone like silver.
"Ice skates!" Tyler breathed, lifting them from the box with reverence. "Just like Madison's!"
I swallowed the lump in my throat. Of course that would be his first thought—not the freedom of skating, but the connection to the girl who had somehow become the center of his father's universe.
"So you can practice," I said softly. "Maybe Dad can take you sometime."
Tyler was already on the floor, unlacing his sneakers, eager to try them on. "Do you think he'll watch me skate like he watches Madison?"
The innocent question pierced my heart. "I'm sure he will, sweetheart."
Tyler sat cross-legged on our living room carpet, meticulously lacing up the skates, his tongue poking out in concentration. He didn't need to know they were secondhand, rejected by Madison when Rebecca bought her an even more expensive pair. He didn't need to know that his father had barely glanced at them when I'd mentioned buying them.
"I'm going to practice every day," Tyler declared, standing carefully on the blade guards, wobbling slightly. "Then Dad will be proud of me too."
The front door opened again, and Michael strode in, car keys jangling impatiently in his hand. "Tyler, Sarah—Rebecca just called. We need to head out now if we're going to make it to Madison's competition."
"But what about my birthday?" Tyler asked, his voice small but hopeful as he balanced in his new skates.
"I told you, buddy, we'll do cake when I get back," Michael said, not really looking at our son. "I promise I'll be back in time. This is just really important to Madison."
As Tyler carefully removed the skates, handling them like precious artifacts, I watched Michael check his phone again, a faint smile playing on his lips at whatever message he'd received. The promise he'd just made to his son already forgotten, replaced by the anticipation of seeing them—Rebecca and Madison, the family he seemed to prefer.
Tyler placed the skates carefully by the door, ready for when his father would return—a return I was beginning to doubt would happen at all.
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