
Husband's Betrayal: Reclaiming Our Lost Son
Chapter 2
The phone rang at seven in the morning, jarring me from the restless sleep I'd finally managed to find. Sarah's name flashed on the screen, and something in my chest tightened. She never called this early unless something was wrong.
"Camille, I'm so sorry to call like this, but I had to tell you." Sarah's voice was strained, careful. "I was at the downtown gallery opening last night—you know, the one for emerging artists? And I saw... I saw Elio there."
My grip tightened on the phone. "Elio? He said he was working late."
"He wasn't alone." The words hung in the air like a death sentence. "He was with Georgina Simmons. And her son."
The room seemed to tilt around me. I pressed my back against the headboard, needing something solid to anchor myself. "What do you mean, with them?"
"Camille, they were holding hands. In public. He introduced her to everyone as his muse, his artistic inspiration. And the little boy—Lewis—he was calling Elio 'daddy' and clinging to his arm like..." Sarah's voice broke slightly. "Like they were a real family. They posed for photographs together. It looked so natural, so established. This isn't new, honey. This has been going on for a while."
The phone slipped from my numb fingers, clattering onto the nightstand. The room spun as Sarah's words echoed in my head. *His muse. Daddy. A real family.*
I couldn't breathe. Couldn't think. All I could see was Elio yesterday, checking his phone, mentioning Georgina's exhibition, the scent of her perfume on his clothes when he came home.
"I have to go," I whispered, picking up the phone.
"Camille, wait—"
But I'd already hung up.
* * *
I drove through the city in a daze, my hands shaking on the steering wheel. Part of me hoped Sarah was wrong, that there was some innocent explanation. But the larger part—the part that had been watching Elio pull away for months—knew she was telling the truth.
Georgina's art studio was in the converted warehouse district, all exposed brick and floor-to-ceiling windows. I parked across the street and sat there for a moment, gathering courage I wasn't sure I possessed.
Through the large window, I could see them.
Elio stood behind Lewis at an easel, his hands guiding the child's smaller ones as they painted together. Georgina watched from a nearby stool, her expression soft and adoring, her hand resting possessively on Elio's shoulder. The afternoon light streaming through the windows cast them in a golden glow, like something from a magazine spread about the perfect family.
It was intimate. Domestic. Real.
Lewis looked up at Elio with pure adoration, saying something that made Elio laugh—a genuine laugh I hadn't heard in months. When was the last time my husband had looked that relaxed? That happy?
Georgina leaned closer, whispering something in Elio's ear that made him smile and nod. Her fingers traced down his arm in a gesture so casual, so familiar, it could only come from established intimacy.
I watched them for twenty minutes, my heart breaking with each passing moment. This wasn't an affair in its early stages. This was a relationship—a family—that had been built while I sat at home, mourning our son alone.
When I finally drove away, tears blurred my vision so badly I had to pull over twice.
* * *
I walked into my own house to find strangers in my living room.
Georgina sat on my couch, perfectly at ease, while Lewis knelt on the carpet surrounded by tissue paper and cardboard. In his small hands was Roy's robot—my son's most treasured possession, the one I'd carefully placed back on his memorial shelf just yesterday.
"Oh, Camille!" Georgina looked up with a bright smile, as if finding her in my home was the most natural thing in the world. "I hope you don't mind. Elio gave us a key so we could pick up the toy for Lewis. He's been so excited about it."
Lewis held up the robot with pure joy. "Look! Daddy Elio said this could be mine now. It's the coolest robot ever!"
The words hit me like physical blows. *Daddy Elio.* The robot that had protected my son from monsters was now in the hands of another child, another family.
"Where did you get that?" My voice came out as barely a whisper.
Georgina's smile faltered slightly. "From Roy's room, of course. Elio thought Lewis would appreciate it more than keeping it locked away gathering dust." She said it so casually, so matter-of-factly, as if Roy's memory was nothing more than clutter to be cleared out.
"That's my son's robot," I said, my voice growing stronger.
"Was," Georgina corrected gently, her tone patronizing. "Elio explained that Roy passed away. Such a tragedy. But surely you can see how much joy it's bringing Lewis now?"
Lewis, oblivious to the tension, made robot noises as he walked the toy across my coffee table—the same table where Roy used to eat his cereal while watching cartoons.
I stood frozen in my own doorway, watching a stranger's child play with my dead son's most precious possession in my own living room, while that child's mother spoke about Roy as if he were ancient history to be discarded.
The satisfied smile on Georgina's face told me everything I needed to know. This wasn't about Lewis's happiness. This was about erasing Roy completely, making room for her own family to take our place.
And Elio had handed her the key—literally and figuratively—to make it happen.
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