
His Mistress Moved In While I Was Hospitalized
Chapter 1
I stared at my phone, reading Michael's text for the fifth time as if the words might somehow rearrange themselves into something more thoughtful: 'Stuck in a meeting. Don't wait up. Happy birthday.'
Thirty-five years old today, and I was celebrating alone in our cavernous Manhattan apartment. The space felt hollow despite the designer furniture and original artwork that Michael's mother, Eleanor, had insisted upon. 'A Zhou residence must reflect proper taste,' she'd said, dismissing my art history degree as if I couldn't possibly understand true sophistication.
The Tiffany box sat on the glass coffee table, its robin's-egg blue a cheerful mockery against the apartment's muted grays and whites. I'd been eyeing it all evening, nursing a glass of wine that had long since warmed to room temperature. Part of me wanted to believe that this year would be different—that the box contained something chosen with care, with me in mind.
My fingers traced the white satin ribbon. Ten years of marriage had taught me to lower my expectations, but hope was a stubborn thing. I tugged at the ribbon, letting it slip between my fingers before lifting the lid.
The bracelet nestled in the velvet was identical to last year's gift—a silver chain with a heart charm, engraved with the same message: 'To my wife, Love M.' Not 'To Emily' or even 'To my beloved.' Just 'To my wife,' as if I were an interchangeable part in the machinery of his life.
I slipped it onto my wrist beside last year's version. They clinked together, indistinguishable from one another. The sound echoed in the empty room, a perfect metaphor for the hollowness that had been growing between us.
'Mrs. Zhou?' Mrs. Rodriguez appeared in the doorway, her kind eyes taking in the scene. 'I've prepared your favorite tea.'
'Thank you.' I smiled at her, grateful for the small kindness. 'And please, it's still Emily.'
She nodded, setting down the delicate cup. 'Happy birthday, Emily.'
After she left, I wandered into our bedroom, drawn to Michael's closet like a detective returning to an unsolved case. His suits hung in perfect order—navy, charcoal, black—a corporate uniform that revealed nothing of the man inside them. I ran my hand along the sleeves, noticing how the ones on the left were coated with a fine layer of dust. When had he last worn them? The cologne that clung to the fabric smelled stale, abandoned.
Something about the untouched clothes sent a chill through me. Michael traveled frequently for work, but lately, his absences felt different. Longer. His explanations vaguer.
I moved to his study, telling myself I was just straightening up. His desk was immaculate as always—Michael hated disorder. I adjusted a stack of papers, and that's when I saw it: a folder partially hidden beneath his laptop.
I shouldn't look. I'd never been the type to snoop.
But my hand was already opening the folder.
Inside were printouts: airline tickets to Miami, not Chicago where he'd claimed to be this week. A hotel confirmation for a beachfront suite. Dates that aligned perfectly with his 'business trip.'
My heart hammered against my ribs as I stared at the evidence of his lie. This wasn't about work. This was something else entirely.
His phone lay charging on the desk. We'd always known each other's passcodes—a gesture of trust that now felt like a cruel joke. With trembling fingers, I pressed his thumb to the sensor, relieved when the screen unlocked.
Messages from someone named 'V' filled his recent history. I tapped on the conversation, and my world collapsed around me.
Photos of Michael on a beach, his arm around a stunning woman. Michael at dinner, laughing more freely than he had with me in years. Michael holding two little boys who couldn't be more than three years old, their features a perfect blend of his and the woman's.
And then, the final blow—a message sent just hours ago: 'The kids miss their daddy. Hurry back to your real family.'
The phone slipped from my hand, landing silently on the plush carpet. Real family. The words burned into my mind as pieces clicked into place: his reluctance to have children with me, blaming it on his supposed infertility. The identical, thoughtless gifts. The growing distance.
For ten years, I had been living a lie.
As I stood in the perfectly appointed study of our perfectly appointed life, I felt something inside me harden. The woman who had spent a decade trying to be the perfect Zhou wife—taking etiquette classes at Eleanor's insistence, abandoning her career, enduring subtle humiliations at family dinners—that woman began to disappear.
In her place stood someone new. Someone who would no longer accept crumbs of affection or lies disguised as love.
The phone in my hand buzzed with a new message from Vanessa: 'Sending another picture of your boys to brighten your day! ❤️'
I stared at the smiling faces of the children I never knew existed, and made a silent promise to myself: This would be the last birthday I spent waiting for Michael Zhou.
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