
His Mistress Wore My Wedding Ring
Chapter 3
I couldn't sleep. The ceiling of our bedroom—my bedroom—seemed to pulse with each heartbeat as I stared upward, my phone clutched in my hand like a lifeline. It had been three days since I'd discovered James and Chloe together, three days of maintaining a façade of normalcy while my world imploded. Each morning, I'd dragged myself from bed to vomit—morning sickness and heartbreak creating a potent cocktail of misery.
The notification light on my phone blinked insistently. I'd accepted Chloe's Instagram request yesterday, a decision that felt like inviting a snake into my garden. But I needed to know. Needed to see what I was up against.
I tapped the screen, wincing at the harsh blue light in the darkness. James lay beside me, his breathing deep and even, utterly oblivious to my silent unraveling. How could he sleep so peacefully while lying next to the wife he betrayed?
The Instagram notification showed Chloe had posted something new. With trembling fingers, I opened the app.
The first image hit me like a physical blow—a delicate display of Tiffany & Co. rings, each engraved with the initials "J&M." My stomach lurched as I swiped through the carousel: Chloe's manicured finger wearing one, then another, her hand resting against what was unmistakably James's chest in the final shot. The geotag read "Vancouver Waterfront."
"Weekend getaways are the best when they're our little secret," the caption read. "Some things are just meant to be forever."
The comments below twisted the knife deeper:
"Girl, you two are GOALS!"
"Another secret weekend? How do you manage it??"
"That J is one lucky man to have snagged you!"
Vancouver. The weekend James had told me he was at a cardiology conference in Portland. I'd packed his suitcase myself, had kissed him goodbye at the door, had even tucked a note in his toiletry bag telling him how proud I was.
I slipped out of bed, careful not to disturb him, and locked myself in the bathroom. Sitting on the edge of the tub, I scrolled through Chloe's profile with morbid fascination. The timestamps created a damning timeline—dinners when James was supposedly working late, weekends he claimed were spent at conferences, even a Christmas Eve when he'd been "called in for an emergency."
My phone pinged with a direct message. Chloe.
"Enjoying leftovers? James saved this one just for me 😉"
Attached was a photo of another ring—this one platinum with a sapphire that matched James's eyes—on her finger. The background was unmistakably the interior of our apartment. My apartment.
I bit down on my hand to stifle the sob that threatened to escape. She'd been here, in our home. In our bed, most likely. While I was... where? Working? Shopping? Living in blissful ignorance?
With shaking hands, I took screenshots of everything. The posts. The comments. The message. Then I created a new folder on my phone labeled "Evidence" and began methodically documenting the affair. Each photo became a piece of a timeline I was constructing—five months of betrayal laid bare in filtered images and smug captions.
In Chloe's earlier posts, I found pictures of handwritten notes—love letters in James's distinctive scrawl. "My Starlight," they began, a pet name I'd never heard him use. One dated from Valentine's Day read: "While others save lives, you've saved my heart." That night, he'd called to say he was stuck in surgery and would miss our dinner reservation.
Hotel receipts flashed in the backgrounds of other photos—the Fairmont in Vancouver, the Four Seasons downtown. Places we'd talked about visiting together "someday" when his schedule allowed.
I returned to bed just before dawn, a hollow calm settling over me. James stirred as I slipped under the covers.
"You okay?" he mumbled, his hand reaching for mine in the darkness.
"Just fine," I whispered, pulling away. "Go back to sleep."
As he drifted off again, I made three decisions: I would not tell him about the baby. I would contact a divorce attorney. And I would never again be someone's leftover.
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