
Chapel Affair Exposed Live
Chapter 1
I traced my finger over the embossed letters of our wedding invitation, admiring the delicate gold foil that caught the light. One month. Just one month until I would become Mrs. Wheeler. The thought should have filled me with nothing but joy, but something felt off tonight as Erik and I sat at our dining table reviewing the final guest list.
"Do you think we should seat your cousin Marcus next to my aunt Judith?" I asked, looking up to find Erik distracted, his thumb absently rubbing the wooden beads of the prayer bracelet on his wrist. It was new—I'd noticed it earlier this week but hadn't asked about it yet.
"Hmm? Oh, yeah, that's fine," he mumbled, still fiddling with the bracelet.
I reached across the table and gently took his wrist, examining the bracelet more closely. "This is pretty. When did you get it?"
Erik pulled his hand back a bit too quickly. "Oh, this? Just something I picked up at the chapel. For... you know, prayer and meditation."
As his wrist passed near my face, something caught my attention—a subtle, unfamiliar fragrance clinging to the wooden beads. Floral, but with notes of vanilla and something spicy I couldn't quite place. Definitely not my perfume.
"It smells nice," I said carefully, watching his face. "Like perfume."
Erik's eyes widened slightly before he composed himself. "Does it? I hadn't noticed."
He touched the bracelet again, a nervous gesture that made my stomach tighten. Five years together had taught me to read his body language like a book.
"Must be from helping that troubled parishioner at work," he added, not quite meeting my eyes. "She was... crying. Probably got her perfume on me when I was comforting her."
"A parishioner came to your office?" I asked, keeping my voice neutral even as my mind began cataloging inconsistencies. Erik worked in finance, not ministry.
"Yeah, she's... also a client. Having spiritual troubles along with financial ones." He stood abruptly. "I'm going to grab a shower before bed. Early meeting tomorrow."
I nodded, watching him retreat to our bathroom. The moment I heard the shower running, I reached for his phone on the counter. Five years together, no secrets between us—that had always been our understanding. My fingerprint still unlocked it, a small mercy.
I wasn't even sure what I was looking for until I noticed the food delivery app icon had a small "2" badge on it. Erik had a second account? I tapped it open and found myself staring at a separate profile with its own payment method and delivery history.
My hands trembled as I scrolled through orders to hotels and restaurants across town—places he'd never mentioned visiting, at times when he was supposedly working late or attending church meetings. Room service orders for two. Champagne. Desserts to share.
The shower was still running. I quickly took screenshots, sending them to myself before returning the phone exactly where he'd left it. By the time Erik emerged from the bathroom, I was calmly addressing wedding invitations, hiding the storm brewing inside me.
The next morning, I called Kayleigh the moment Erik left for work.
"I need you to come over. Now," I said, my voice surprisingly steady despite having barely slept.
Thirty minutes later, we sat at my kitchen table, screenshots and credit card statements spread before us. I'd accessed our shared financial accounts and printed everything from the past six months.
"Holy shit, Ny," Kayleigh whispered, pointing to a pattern of charges. "Look at these. Same chapel, every Tuesday and Thursday. 'Private prayer room donation'? And then hotel charges an hour later?"
I stared at the evidence, feeling simultaneously numb and like I might vomit. "The night I lost the baby," I said, my finger landing on a date etched permanently in my memory. "He said he was at the hospital with me all night, but look—chapel charge at 11 PM, hotel charge at midnight."
Kayleigh's face hardened. "The night of your miscarriage? That absolute piece of—"
"I need to know for sure," I cut her off, my mind already formulating a plan. "I need to see it with my own eyes."
"What are you thinking?" Kayleigh asked, recognizing the determined look in my eyes.
"Thursday is the day after tomorrow," I said, tracing the pattern of chapel visits. "If he's been this consistent, he'll be there again." I looked up at my best friend, feeling something cold and resolute settle in my chest. "And so will I."
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