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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 2

I stood in their living room like a ghost haunting the scene of my own murder, surrounded by the evidence of their shared life. The sound of the key turning in the lock made my heart slam against my ribs, but I forced myself to remain still, my hands clasped behind my back to hide their trembling.

The door swung open, and there they were—Trace and Andrea, fingers intertwined, her head thrown back in laughter at something he'd whispered in her ear. The sound died in her throat the moment she saw me. Trace's face went through a series of expressions—shock, annoyance, then something cold and calculating that I'd never seen before.

"What the hell are you doing here?" His voice cut through the silence like a blade, no trace of the gentle husband I thought I knew.

I opened my mouth to speak, to demand explanations, to ask how he could do this to us, but he didn't give me the chance.

"Let me guess," he continued, stepping further into the apartment while Andrea clung to his arm like a lifeline. "You've been stalking me. Following me around like some pathetic, clingy housewife who can't take a hint."

The words hit me like physical blows. "Trace, we need to talk. We're married. We took vows—"

"Vows?" He laughed, the sound harsh and mocking. "You mean that piece of paper that trapped me in the most boring relationship of my life? Andrea understands me, Ophelia. She gets who I really am, not this suffocating version of myself I have to be around you."

Andrea stepped closer to him, her voice sickeningly sweet. "Honey, maybe we should call security. She's obviously having some kind of breakdown." Her eyes raked over me with undisguised contempt. "Look at her—so desperate and pathetic. That frumpy sweater, those sad little shoes. No wonder you needed someone who actually takes care of herself."

My hands shook as I reached into my purse, pulling out the one thing that proved I wasn't delusional, wasn't imagining the life we'd built together. "This is our marriage certificate, Trace. We've been together for three years. We have a home, a life—"

"Give me that." He lunged forward, snatching the document from my hands before I could react. Our marriage certificate—the paper that had once represented our love, our commitment, our future—crumpled in his fists.

I watched in horror as he tore it in half, then in half again, the pieces fluttering to the hardwood floor like dying butterflies. "There. Now it's as meaningless as it always was."

"How can you say that?" My voice broke, tears streaming down my face. "How can you destroy us like this?"

Andrea stepped forward, her smile cruel. "Because there was never an 'us,' sweetie. There was just you, clinging to a man who was already planning his escape. Look around—this is real. This apartment, our life together, the way he looks at me. You were just... practice."

I dropped to my knees, frantically trying to gather the torn pieces of our marriage certificate, my vision blurred with tears. Maybe I could tape it back together, maybe I could somehow fix what he'd broken. My fingers scrambled across the floor, collecting the fragments of my shattered life.

Then Trace's foot came down hard on my hand.

The pain shot up my arm like lightning, and I cried out, trying to pull away. But he pressed down harder, grinding his heel into my fingers until I could feel my wedding ring cutting into my flesh.

"You need to leave," he said, his voice deadly quiet. "Right now. And if you ever show up here again, if you ever try to contact me or interfere with my life, I'll make sure you regret it. You think you know people? You think you have resources? You're nobody, Ophelia. Just a boring office worker with delusions of importance. I know people who can make your life very, very difficult."

I looked up at him through my tears, this man I'd loved, this stranger wearing my husband's face. Andrea stood beside him, filming with her phone, her expression gleeful as she captured my humiliation.

"Please," I whispered, my hand throbbing under his weight. "Please, Trace. Don't do this."

He pressed down harder, and I screamed.

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