
He Stripped Off His Ring So I Stripped Him of Everything
Chapter 3
"Convincing for who? Me or the wife?"
My fingertips stopped on the freezing aluminum frame. The broken screen hung inches from my nose. Through the jagged rip in the gray mesh, the amber light from inside the RV painted everything in sharp relief.
I saw her face.
Dana.
Ryan's old college friend. The girl who starred in half his funny stories at dinner parties. The one who always sent a generic holiday card. Now, she sat on the edge of the cramped kitchenette counter, her legs dangling, her boots brushing against Ryan's jeans.
"Leave Michelle out of this," Ryan said. His voice lacked any real bite.
"Why?" Dana tilted her head, a dark curl falling across her cheek. "She's the reason we're hiding in Eddie's rusted-out piece of junk instead of your nice, clean trailer."
"We aren't hiding."
"Right." Dana let out another bright, musical laugh. "We're just doing maintenance."
I didn't push the door open. I didn't make a single sound. My hand remained suspended in the air, a phantom limb reaching for a husband who was already gone.
Ryan stepped closer to her. He bridged the tiny gap between them. His hands—the hands that built our dining table, the hands that held mine during my mother's funeral—settled onto Dana's hips.
"You're shaking," Ryan murmured, his tone dropping into that soft, intimate register he usually saved for Sunday mornings in our bed.
"It's freezing out here," Dana replied. She didn't pull away. Instead, she leaned forward, resting her palms flat against his chest. "And you took off your jacket."
"I can warm you up."
"Is that another one of your fixing projects?"
"I'm highly skilled."
"I remember." Dana's eyes locked onto his. "You used to be, anyway. College was a long time ago."
"I haven't lost my touch, Dana."
My suspended hand slowly curled inward. The tips of my nails bit hard into the soft flesh of my palm. The sharp sting anchored me to the dirt.
I stared at his profile. The relaxed slope of his shoulders. The slight, easy smile curving his lips. He never smiled like that at home anymore. Around me, he always carried a faint tension, a quiet exhaustion he claimed came from work.
He wasn't exhausted now.
"Did you ever tell her about us?" Dana asked, tracing a finger down the center of his white undershirt.
"There's nothing to tell."
"We hooked up for three years, Ryan."
"And now I'm married."
"Doesn't look like it right now," she whispered.
"I said I'm married," Ryan replied, his thumbs drawing slow circles on her waist. "I didn't say I was dead."
"What if she comes looking for you?"
"She won't," Ryan answered instantly.
"You sound very sure."
"I know her." He shifted his weight, pressing his thighs against her knees. "She hates the dark. She hates the noise. She's sitting right where I left her, keeping the fire going."
"Such a loyal girl."
"She likes the routine."
"And you?" Dana asked, her voice barely carrying through the torn screen. "Do you like the routine, Ryan?"
"Why do you think I texted you last month?"
The words landed like physical blows.
*Last month.*
This wasn't a sudden, drunken mistake at a music festival. This was planned.
"You said you needed advice on a gift," Dana teased.
"I lied."
"I know." She grabbed the collar of his shirt. "You're a terrible liar."
"Only to you."
"Take off the ring, Ryan."
"What?"
"The ring." Dana tapped his left hand. "If you want to fix this, take it off. I don't want it scratching me."
A heavy silence stretched inside the small RV. I watched his face. I waited for the hesitation. I waited for the guilt to flash across his features, for the sudden realization of what he was about to destroy.
Ryan didn't hesitate.
He lifted his left hand. His right thumb and index finger gripped the gold band. He twisted it once, pulling it over his knuckle. The metal clinked sharply against the faux-granite countertop.
"Better?" he asked.
"Much," Dana said.
She pulled his mouth down to hers.
A scream clawed its way up my throat. It tasted like ash and copper. It demanded to be let out, to shatter the quiet night, to tear through that flimsy mesh and ruin them both.
I swallowed it down.
The urge to throw the door wide open burned in my veins, but I froze the impulse. Pushing through that door meant screaming. It meant crying in front of a woman who was currently laughing at my loyalty. It meant demanding answers from a man who had just tossed our marriage onto a cheap counter.
Confrontation was for the weak. It was for people who still believed there was something left to save.
I watched his hands slide under the hem of her shirt. I watched her head tilt back, exposing her neck to his mouth.
My eyes stayed completely dry. The tears refused to come. The betrayal was too absolute, too crystal clear for crying.
I lowered my hand.
I didn't snap a twig. I didn't scuff my boots against the dirt. I stepped backward, my movements silent and precise. The amber light from the RV faded as I put distance between us. The sounds of their heavy breathing blended with the rustle of the wind through the pines.
I turned my back on Eddie's rig.
I walked past the rows of darkened campers. The cold air rushed against my face, cooling the flush in my cheeks. My mind worked with a terrifying, mechanical clarity.
*Last month.*
*A text message.*
*College stories.*
Every memory rearranged itself, fitting into a new, ugly puzzle.
I reached our silver trailer. The exterior lights were off. I grabbed the handle, ignoring the slight tremor in my fingers, and let myself inside.
The cabin felt like a tomb. The lavender scent sickened me now. I locked the door behind me, the deadbolt sliding home with a heavy, final thud.
I didn't turn on the overhead lights.
I dropped Ryan's car keys onto the small dinette table. The plastic compass clattered against the wood.
I reached into the deep pocket of my jacket. My fingers closed around the cold glass of my phone. I pulled it out and tapped the screen.
The harsh white light illuminated the dark trailer, casting long shadows across the narrow walls.
I stared at the display.
The voice memo app dominated the screen. A red bar pulsed at the top. The numbers in the center rolled steadily forward.
*14:01... 14:02... 14:03...*
I hadn't just stood there paralyzed. The moment I heard her laugh back at the tree line, the moment my feet had crushed the pine needles, I had reached into my pocket. I had pressed record before my fingertips ever touched that cold aluminum frame.
Every word. Every cruel joke. The clink of the wedding band hitting the counter.
It was all there. Captured. Saved.
I tapped the red square to stop the recording. The file saved automatically. I renamed it with a few quick keystrokes: *The Fix.*
My reflection stared back at me in the dark glass of the phone screen. My jaw was locked tight. My eyes looked hollow, stripped of the naive warmth that had kept me waiting by a dying fire.
I pressed the phone flat against the table, right next to his keys.
"So be it, Ryan," I whispered to the empty room. "You'll find out—"
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