
Betrayal on the Cruise Ship
Chapter 1
The call came while I was sorting through charity proposals in my home office, the afternoon sun casting long shadows across my desk. The cruise company's cheerful ringtone felt jarring against the stack of grant applications I'd been reviewing all morning.
"Mrs. Coleman? This is Marcus from Royal Caribbean Guest Services. I'm calling to confirm the dining modification your husband requested for your upcoming anniversary cruise."
I tucked the phone between my ear and shoulder, still scanning the budget proposal before me. "Modification? I wasn't aware of any changes."
"Yes, ma'am. Mr. Coleman called this morning to increase your lunch reservations from two to three persons for all dates. I just wanted to confirm if there are any dietary restrictions for your additional guest."
My hand froze mid-page turn. Three lunches? We weren't bringing anyone else. This was supposed to be our tenth anniversary celebration—the romantic getaway Reece had been planning for months, just the two of us.
"I'm sorry," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "There must be some mistake. It's just my husband and me on this trip."
Marcus's professional tone didn't waver. "Oh, I see. Perhaps Mr. Coleman has a surprise planned? The reservation notes specifically requested three place settings at all meals."
I swallowed hard. "When exactly did he make this change?"
"This morning at 9:43 AM, ma'am."
While I was at the charity board meeting. While Reece was supposedly in back-to-back conferences all morning.
"Thank you, Marcus. I'll... discuss this with my husband and get back to you."
After hanging up, I sat motionless, staring at the wedding photo on my desk—Reece and me, ten years younger, beaming at each other with unbridled joy. Three lunches. Who was the third?
That evening, I couldn't focus on anything. Reece texted that he'd be working late again—the third time this week. Instead of confronting him immediately, I found myself mindlessly scrolling through Instagram, searching for... what? Evidence? Reassurance?
I navigated to our company's social media page, where recent posts showcased our upcoming charity gala. Several employees had commented, including Savannah Brooks, our top sales performer. Something made me click on her profile.
"Cruise Girl Savannah" was her handle. My stomach tightened as I scrolled through her feed—luxury resorts, beach sunsets, and champagne flutes against endless ocean horizons. But it was her comments on travel influencers' posts that made my blood run cold.
"Can't wait for my Mediterranean getaway next month! #countdownbegins" on a post about Italian coastal towns.
"That sunset view from the balcony suite looks EXACTLY like the pictures! Booking now!" on a Royal Caribbean promotional post—the same cruise line we were using.
I clicked on her profile picture, enlarging it to study her face. Savannah Brooks—the vivacious blonde who'd won Sales Person of the Year three times running. The woman Reece had personally mentored and promoted. The woman whose name appeared more frequently in his texts than mine did lately.
My fingers trembled as I opened our joint email account—the one we used for travel bookings and household bills. Reece's password had always been the same: NatRee2013, our names combined with the year we met. So predictable, so sentimental. So unlike the man who was apparently booking three-person lunches behind my back.
The Royal Caribbean confirmation email sat in the inbox. I opened it, scanning for details. Our luxury suite was there, reserved under both our names. But something compelled me to search deeper. I entered Reece's email address in the cruise line's "manage my booking" portal and requested all reservations associated with his account.
Two results appeared.
Our suite—and room 2202, booked under an email I'd never seen before: rcoleman.backup@gmail.com.
Backup. The word hit me like a physical blow.
Reece had a pathological need for backups in everything. Backup wedding rings in case mine was ever lost. Backup copies of our marriage certificate kept in three different locations. Backup emergency contacts, backup investments, backup plans for every scenario.
And now, apparently, a backup woman.
I stared at the reservation details for room 2202, the truth crystallizing with brutal clarity. The Mediterranean cruise that was meant to celebrate our decade of marriage, of building a life together from nothing—he was planning to share it with her too.
The house suddenly felt too quiet, too suffocating. I closed the laptop and walked to our bedroom window, looking out at the city lights blurring through my tears. Ten years of memories played through my mind as I tried to pinpoint when exactly I'd become just another thing in Reece Coleman's life that required a backup plan.
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