
Husband's Betrayal: Reclaiming Our Lost Son
Chapter 1
The morning light filtered through the bedroom curtains, casting soft shadows across the floor. I ran my fingers over Roy's robot toy, tracing the familiar contours of its metallic arms and legs. Four years. Four years since I'd held my son instead of his belongings. The weight of the toy in my palm was nothing compared to the weight in my chest.
I carefully polished each joint and button, making sure it gleamed just as Roy had loved it. He'd carried this robot everywhere—to preschool, to the park, even insisted on having it next to his pillow at night. "It protects me from the monsters, Mommy," he'd whisper, his eyes wide with childish certainty.
Now this robot was all I had left to bring to his grave.
"Elio?" I called out, my voice echoing through our too-quiet house. "We should leave soon if we want to beat the traffic."
The silence that followed was broken only by the sound of running water from the bathroom. A few minutes later, Elio emerged, hair still damp, his expression guarded in that way it always was on this day.
"I picked up fresh white roses," I said, gesturing to the bouquet on the kitchen counter. "Roy's favorite."
Elio nodded, his eyes not quite meeting mine. "I have that meeting later, but I'll be there for the important part."
"You promised you'd take the whole day off this year," I reminded him gently, though disappointment was already settling in my stomach. Every year, it was the same dance—Elio finding reasons to minimize the time spent acknowledging our loss.
"I know, I know. I will. Just... there's this thing with Georgina's exhibition I need to check on. It won't take long."
Georgina. Again. The artist whose name seemed to appear in our conversations with increasing frequency. I swallowed hard and focused on wrapping Roy's robot carefully in his favorite blue blanket.
"Fine. I'll meet you there at eleven?"
"Eleven," he confirmed, already checking his phone. "I promise."
* * *
The cemetery was peaceful in the late morning sun. Other families moved between the graves—some with children who skipped along the paths, others elderly couples moving with slow deliberation. I sat cross-legged on the grass beside Roy's small headstone, arranging the white roses in the built-in vase.
"Hey, baby," I whispered, running my fingers over the engraved letters of his name. "Mommy's here."
I unwrapped the robot and placed it against the headstone, positioning it as if it were standing guard. Roy would have liked that.
"Daddy's coming soon," I promised, though as the minutes ticked by on my watch, doubt crept in. Eleven came and went. Then noon. I checked my phone repeatedly—no messages, no calls.
A family nearby finished their visit, the father lifting a small girl onto his shoulders as they walked away. She giggled, her hands tangled in his hair. I looked away, the familiar ache intensifying in my chest.
By two o'clock, the sun was high overhead, beating down on my bare shoulders. Three hours. I'd been waiting three hours, and still no sign of Elio. No call. Nothing.
When my phone finally rang at 2:37, I fumbled to answer it, hope and anger warring inside me.
"Where are you?" I asked without preamble.
"Camille, I'm sorry." Elio's voice was strained, background noise nearly drowning him out. "Georgina and Lewis are having an emergency. Lewis fell and might have broken his wrist. We're at the hospital."
"On today of all days?" My voice cracked. "You promised, Elio."
"I know, I know. It's just—they needed me. Lewis was crying for me specifically."
Something cold settled in my stomach. "What about your own son? The one who can't cry for you anymore?"
"That's not fair," he said, his voice hardening. "I'll bring the robot later, okay? I just can't leave them right now."
"I have the robot," I said quietly. "I've been sitting here with it for hours."
A pause. "Oh. I thought... never mind. I'll come as soon as I can."
But he didn't come. Not that afternoon. Not that evening.
I returned home alone with Roy's untouched memorial toy, the house echoing with emptiness. I placed the robot on Roy's shelf in his untouched bedroom, my fingers lingering on its cool metal surface.
"I'm sorry he didn't come, baby," I whispered to the empty room.
When the front door finally opened well after midnight, I was sitting in the dark living room, staring at nothing. Elio's silhouette paused in the doorway.
"Camille?"
"You didn't come," I said simply.
"I texted you I couldn't make it back in time."
I checked my phone. There was indeed a message, sent at 9:48 PM: *Got caught up. Will make it up to you tomorrow.*
As he stepped into the light from the hallway, I could see he was still wearing the same clothes from this morning. And something else—the unmistakable floral scent of Georgina's expensive perfume clinging to his shirt.
"Where were you all night?" I asked, my voice hollow.
"Making sure Lewis was okay. It was just a sprain, thankfully." Elio ran his hand through his hair—his tell when he wasn't being entirely truthful. "Look, I'm sorry about today. I really am."
"You missed visiting your son's grave on the anniversary of his death to be with another woman and her child," I said, the words cutting through the air between us.
"It's not like that. You're making something out of nothing." His eyes shifted away from mine. "Helping Georgina and Lewis doesn't mean I love Roy any less."
But he couldn't meet my gaze as he said it, and in that moment, the distance between us felt greater than ever before.
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