
Husband Chooses Mistress Over Wife
Chapter 3
I stood in the doorway of my own home, rain still dripping from my funeral clothes, and wondered if I'd somehow walked into the wrong house. The scent of garlic and herbs filled the air, mingling with the sound of laughter from the kitchen—laughter, on the day I buried my father.
I followed the sound, my black heels clicking against the hardwood floors, each step heavier than the last. When I reached the kitchen doorway, the scene before me froze the breath in my lungs.
Stormi stood at my kitchen island, wearing my navy silk dress—the one Tucker had given me for our anniversary last year—her blonde hair cascading over her shoulders as she sipped wine from my father's favorite crystal glass. Tucker moved around her, stirring something on the stove, his funeral suit replaced by jeans and a casual button-down, his tie nowhere to be seen.
"That smells amazing," Stormi cooed, leaning against Tucker's shoulder as he added pepper to whatever he was cooking. "You're such a lifesaver. I don't know what I would've done without you today."
"Charlie's going to be fine," Tucker assured her, his voice warm in a way it hadn't been for me in months. "The vet said he'll be good as new by tomorrow."
Neither of them had noticed me yet, standing there in my rain-soaked dress, mascara streaked down my cheeks, my father's funeral program still clutched in my trembling hand.
"I can't believe you're cooking dinner in my kitchen while my father is being lowered into the ground," I finally said, my voice cutting through their intimate bubble.
They both startled, turning toward me with matching expressions of surprise—but not guilt. Never guilt.
"Bailey," Tucker said, setting down his wooden spoon. "You're home early."
"Early?" I echoed, disbelief making my voice crack. "The funeral ended an hour ago. The funeral you missed because Stormi's dog ate chocolate."
Stormi had the audacity to step forward, her face arranged in a mask of sympathy that never reached her eyes. "Bailey, I'm so sorry about your father. But Charlie nearly died today. If Tucker hadn't come when he did—"
"Stop." I held up my hand. "Just stop. You're wearing my dress."
She glanced down as if noticing for the first time, though the perfectly tied sash at her waist told me otherwise. "Oh! Tucker said I could borrow something while my clothes dried. I got soaked at the vet's office."
I turned to Tucker, searching his face for any sign of the man I'd married, the man who'd once held me when I cried, who'd promised to stand beside me through every storm.
"How could you?" I whispered. "How could you miss his funeral?"
Tucker's jaw tightened. "Bailey, I explained this already. It was an emergency."
"My father's funeral was an emergency, Tucker! The only father I will ever have is gone, and you chose a dog—a dog who probably just had an upset stomach—over being there for me."
"You're being dramatic," he said dismissively, turning back to the stove. "It was just a funeral. Your father was already dead. Charlie could have died without intervention."
The words hit me like physical blows. Just a funeral. Already dead. As if the ritual of saying goodbye to my father meant nothing. As if my grief was an inconvenience to his evening plans with Stormi.
"We're celebrating Charlie's recovery," Stormi added, raising her wine glass with a smile that didn't quite reach her eyes. "You're welcome to join us if you want to change out of those wet clothes."
I looked between them—at Stormi wearing my dress, drinking from my father's glass; at Tucker cooking for her on the night of my father's funeral—and something inside me hardened into cold, clear resolve.
Without another word, I turned and walked upstairs to our bedroom, locked the door, and for the first time since my father's death, I allowed myself to truly weep—not just for Dad, but for the marriage I now realized was already dead and buried.
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