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Husband's Virtual Affair Unraveled Novel Cover

Husband's Virtual Affair Unraveled

I stared at the screen, my fingers frozen over the keyboard. This couldn't be happening. Not to me. Not to us. The private message thread between my husband Trace and someone named "RainySouthern" stretched endlessly before my eyes, months of conversations I was never meant to see. I'd only logged into our shared gaming account to check on a rare item we'd been saving for, but what I found instead was the digital evidence of my husband's double life. "I miss you when you're not online," RainySouthern had written just yesterday. "Can't wait to hold you again tomorrow." Trace's response made my stomach turn: "Miss you more, babe. Our little virtual family is the highlight of my day." Virtual family? I scrolled up, my heart pounding against my ribs.
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Chapter 1

I stared at the screen, my fingers frozen over the keyboard. This couldn't be happening. Not to me. Not to us.

The private message thread between my husband Trace and someone named "RainySouthern" stretched endlessly before my eyes, months of conversations I was never meant to see. I'd only logged into our shared gaming account to check on a rare item we'd been saving for, but what I found instead was the digital evidence of my husband's double life.

"I miss you when you're not online," RainySouthern had written just yesterday. "Can't wait to hold you again tomorrow."

Trace's response made my stomach turn: "Miss you more, babe. Our little virtual family is the highlight of my day."

Virtual family? I scrolled up, my heart pounding against my ribs. There they were – screenshots of their game characters posed together with two small avatar children. They'd named them Lily and Ethan. They'd built a virtual home. They had inside jokes and pet names and plans for the future.

My wedding ring felt suddenly heavy on my finger as I clicked through file after file, message after message. How long had this been going on? How had I missed it? We played this game together almost every night, yet somehow Trace had created an entirely separate existence within it.

"Can't believe the wife still doesn't suspect anything," read one of Trace's messages from three months ago. "She's too busy with her boring office job to notice."

The wife. Not Ophelia. Not even my name. Just "the wife" – an inconvenient obstacle in their fantasy world.

I took a deep breath and switched tactics, opening a new browser tab. If this RainySouthern person existed in the game, they existed somewhere in real life too. I started with the gaming forums, cross-referencing the username with social media profiles. It took hours of meticulous searching, following digital breadcrumbs through profile after profile.

Finally, I found her – Andrea Franklin. Pretty, younger than me, with a cascade of photos showing her at parties and beaches. And there, in the background of one image posted three weeks ago, I spotted a familiar watch. Trace's watch. The one I'd given him for our anniversary.

My hands trembled as I dug deeper. Their messages mentioned meeting at an apartment in Manhattan tomorrow – a luxury high-rise in a neighborhood we could never afford on our supposed budget. They'd been talking about the spare key hidden in the planter by the door, about stocking the fridge with champagne, about celebrating their six-month "real world" anniversary.

Six months. They'd been physically together for six months while I sat at home, waiting for my husband to return from "work trips" and "late meetings."

I wrote down the address from their messages, my handwriting barely legible through my tears. Tomorrow, they'd be there together. Tomorrow, I would see for myself what my marriage had become.

The next day, I called in sick to work and took the train into Manhattan, my heart a cold stone in my chest. The building was exactly as I'd feared – gleaming, expensive, with a doorman who barely glanced at me as I walked in behind a resident. I rode the elevator to the twelfth floor, each floor bringing me closer to a truth I didn't want to face.

Apartment 12C. I stood before the door, paralyzed. Then, mechanically, I reached for the planter beside the door. My fingers found the key exactly where their messages had described.

It fit perfectly in the lock.

I pushed the door open and stepped into the physical manifestation of my husband's betrayal. The apartment was stunning – open concept, floor-to-ceiling windows, designer furniture. Nothing like the modest home where Trace had told me we needed to "budget carefully."

On the walls hung photos of them together – my husband and this woman – laughing, embracing, looking at each other with the love that had once been directed at me. Their clothes hung side by side in the closet. Her perfume sat next to his cologne on the bathroom counter. A pair of wine glasses stood in the sink, lipstick on one rim.

In the bedroom, the evidence was undeniable. Her things. His things. Their things. The intimacy of their shared space screamed at me from every corner.

I sank down onto the edge of their bed, clutching my stomach as if I'd been physically struck. My marriage hadn't just been damaged – it had been a complete fabrication. While I worked and waited and loved him faithfully, Trace had built an entirely separate life with another woman.

And tomorrow, they would be here together. Tomorrow, I would confront the two people who had shattered my world into unrecognizable pieces.

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