
Husband's Affair Exposed
Chapter 3
I couldn't sleep. The moonlight filtered through the curtains of my small adjoining room, casting shadows across the unfamiliar walls. This wasn't how I'd imagined our honeymoon—me alone in a separate bed while my husband and his sister occupied the luxurious suite meant for us.
The sound of laughter drifted through the thin walls. Victoria's musical giggle followed by Marcus's deep chuckle—a sound so foreign to me it might as well have belonged to a stranger. I pressed my pillow against my ears, but the muffled sounds of their intimacy still penetrated.
With trembling fingers, I reached for my phone on the nightstand, seeking distraction. The screen illuminated my face in the darkness as I mindlessly scrolled through social media, a habit born from countless lonely nights.
A notification appeared—Victoria had posted a new Instagram story. My thumb hovered over her icon, a voice in my head warning me not to look. But I couldn't resist.
The video began playing, and my world collapsed.
Marcus, my husband who claimed he couldn't touch me because of his crippling anxiety, was carrying Victoria waist-deep into the ocean waves. His arms were wrapped securely around her waist, her legs dangling as she squealed with delight. The setting sun bathed them in golden light as they laughed together, their faces inches apart.
Then, as if to drive the knife deeper, he leaned forward and pressed his lips against her neck in a kiss that was anything but brotherly.
"Our perfect sunset," read the caption, followed by a heart emoji.
My phone slipped from my numb fingers, landing on the bedsheets with a soft thud. The air in the room suddenly felt too thick to breathe. My chest constricted as three years of lies crystallized into a single, undeniable truth.
It wasn't anxiety. It was never anxiety.
He simply didn't want me.
I sat there, motionless, as minutes or hours passed—I couldn't tell which. The sounds from the other room had stopped. In their place was a deafening silence that screamed louder than any confession could.
Something inside me snapped. I stood up, my legs unsteady as I moved toward the connecting door. Without knocking, I pushed it open.
Marcus was alone, sitting on the edge of the massive bed, his back to me. He turned at the sound of the door, his expression shifting from surprise to irritation.
"What are you doing?" he asked, his voice cold.
"I saw the video," I said, my words coming out steadier than I expected. "On Victoria's Instagram."
His face remained impassive, but a muscle in his jaw twitched—the tell I'd learned to recognize before his anger surfaced.
"I don't know what you're talking about," he replied, standing up to his full height, towering over me.
I held up my phone, the paused video showing his arms wrapped around Victoria. "This. You told me you couldn't touch me because of your anxiety. That physical contact was impossible for you." My voice cracked. "But that was a lie, wasn't it? Your anxiety magically disappears around Victoria."
Marcus's eyes darkened as he stared at the screen, then at me. The silence between us stretched taut, dangerous.
"You're being ridiculous," he finally said, turning away to pour himself a glass of wine from the bottle on the nightstand. "She's my sister."
"Not by blood," I countered, courage surging through me from some unknown reserve. "And that doesn't explain why you can hold her, touch her, when you can't even bear to shake my hand. Why you've never once—in three years—shown me a fraction of the affection you show her every day."
He took a long sip of his wine, his back still to me. "You're acting unstable, Isabella."
"No," I said, stepping closer. "For the first time, I'm seeing clearly. Your anxiety isn't real. It's just an excuse to avoid being a husband to me while you—"
The glass flew from his hand before I could finish, shattering against the wall inches from my head. I flinched as wine splattered across my face and nightgown, a shard of glass slicing across my wrist as I raised my arm to protect myself.
Blood welled from the cut, a thin crimson line against my pale skin. Marcus stared at it, his face devoid of concern or remorse.
"Stop acting unstable," he repeated, his voice dangerously soft. "Clean yourself up and go back to your room. You're embarrassing yourself."
I stood frozen, watching my blood drip onto the pristine white carpet, feeling something inside me bleed far more profoundly than my wrist ever could.
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