
Husband's Deception Exposed
Chapter 3
The notification chimed as I scrolled through my phone, killing time while waiting for Erik to come home. It was nearly 10 PM on a Tuesday, and he'd texted that he was 'wrapping up a meeting.' Another late night. The third this week.
My thumb hovered over the Instagram notification. Lola Jones had tagged Erik in a post. Something twisted in my stomach—that same uneasy feeling that had been growing since the night of my car breakdown and solidified at my father's hospital bedside.
I tapped the notification, and the image loaded: Lola wearing Mickey Mouse ears, her auburn hair cascading over her shoulders, Erik's arm casually draped around her. They stood in front of Sleeping Beauty's castle, golden hour light casting them in a romantic glow. Her caption read: 'Best boss ever for this surprise team-building trip! #DisneyMagic #WorkPerks #BestTeam'
Team-building trip? I stared at the photo, trying to process what I was seeing. Erik had told me he was in San Diego for a conference last weekend. There was no mention of Disneyland, no mention of Lola.
I zoomed in on his face—the genuine smile, the relaxed posture, the way his fingers curled possessively around her shoulder. My husband looked happier in this photo than he had with me in months.
The comments made it worse:
'You two look so cute together!'
'What a perfect day!'
'Aww, you guys are adorable!'
Lola had responded to each with heart emojis and inside jokes I wasn't privy to. Erik had liked every comment.
I kept scrolling through her profile, finding more breadcrumbs of a relationship I hadn't known existed. Photos of late-night 'strategy sessions' at upscale restaurants. A boomerang of champagne glasses clinking with the caption 'Celebrating another successful quarter with the best mentor a girl could ask for.'
Then I saw it—a close-up of Lola's wrist adorned with a delicate diamond bracelet. 'Sometimes hard work gets rewarded in the most beautiful ways. #Blessed #BestBossEver'
The bracelet looked familiar. Too familiar. I'd pointed it out to Erik in a jewelry store window three months ago during our anniversary weekend. He'd smiled and said, 'Maybe for Christmas, honey. It's a bit much for right now.'
Apparently, it wasn't 'a bit much' for his secretary.
The front door opened, and I quickly locked my phone, setting it face-down on the coffee table. Erik walked in, loosening his tie.
'Hey,' he said, dropping his briefcase by the door. 'Sorry I'm late. The Henderson account is proving more complicated than we thought.'
I nodded, not trusting my voice. The image of him and Lola at Disneyland burned behind my eyelids.
'You okay?' he asked, finally noticing my silence.
'Fine,' I managed. 'Just tired.'
He nodded, already checking his phone. 'I'm going to grab a shower.'
As he disappeared upstairs, I remembered Elisabeth from last year's holiday party. The marketing executive had made her interest in Erik painfully obvious—sending him expensive whiskey, suggesting private dinners, even 'accidentally' brushing against him during conversations. Erik had shut it down immediately and publicly. 'I'm happily married,' he'd told her firmly when she'd invited him to dinner. 'And I don't mix business with pleasure.'
Yet here he was, taking Lola to Disneyland, buying her diamond bracelets, and spending more evenings with her than with me.
The company gala the following week confirmed everything I'd feared. I watched from across the room as Erik guided Lola through the crowd, his hand resting on the small of her back—a touch so intimate it made my chest ache. He brought her champagne without being asked, leaned in close to hear her speak over the music, and laughed at her jokes with genuine delight.
When I approached them, Lola's smile never faltered, but her tactics shifted immediately.
'Erik, I was just telling Sophie how brilliant your strategy for the Westfield merger was,' she said, her voice honey-sweet. 'The way you restructured their assets to minimize tax liability was nothing short of genius.'
Erik launched into an explanation filled with financial jargon while Lola nodded appreciatively, her eyes never leaving his face. I stood there, effectively invisible in a conversation deliberately crafted to exclude me.
As I watched them, I realized with painful clarity that I was witnessing the slow, deliberate dismantling of my marriage—and my husband was a willing participant.
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