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I Caught Them in the Guest Bathroom Novel Cover

I Caught Them in the Guest Bathroom

Sophia thought she had it all—a devoted husband, a beautiful marriage, and the kind of love people envied. But on their seventh anniversary, the illusion shattered. What began as a perfect evening of champagne and celebration ended with a single devastating truth: her husband, Adrian, was cheating—with her best friend. Humiliated yet eerily calm, Sophia exposes the betrayal in front of two hundred guests, detonating the perfect life she thought she knew. But the night of heartbreak is only the beginning. As Adrian spirals into obsession and public desperation, Sophia discovers his infidelity runs far deeper—and darker—than one affair. Torn between vengeance and healing, she must decide whether reclaiming her power means destroying him completely—or walking away with her dignity intact.
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Chapter 1

"You still remember our first meeting?" I asked, nestled against Adrian's chest as we flipped through our photo album. Seven years of memories captured in glossy prints—from our chance encounter at the university library to his rain-soaked proposal, to our sun-drenched wedding in Santorini.

The weight of his arm around my shoulders felt like home. Safe. Certain.

"Of course I remember," Adrian murmured, his lips brushing the top of my head. "You knocked over my coffee, then insisted on buying me a new one."

I laughed, tracing my finger over a photo of us from that day—me looking mortified, him pretending to be annoyed but failing to hide his smile. "Best investment I ever made."

He pulled me closer, his familiar cologne enveloping me. "I love you, Sophia. Forever and always."

My heart swelled as I turned the page to our wedding photos. His eyes that day—I'd never seen such certainty in them. Such promise.

"You're my home," I whispered, our special phrase, the one that meant everything was right in our world.

He kissed me deeply in response, and I felt that familiar flutter—seven years together, and he could still make my pulse race.

"We should get ready," I reluctantly pulled away. "Two hundred people waiting to celebrate us."

"Let them wait," he growled playfully, pulling me back.

Two hours later, we arrived at Le Ciel, the restaurant's chandeliers casting a golden glow over the sea of familiar faces. Our anniversary celebration—a testament to what everyone called our "couple goals" relationship.

"There they are!" My mother rushed forward, embracing us both. "The perfect couple!"

I beamed, squeezing Adrian's hand. This was everything I'd ever wanted—him, our friends, our families, all celebrating the life we'd built together.

The evening flowed like the champagne—toasts, laughter, shared memories. Only Adrian seemed slightly distracted, his phone buzzing repeatedly with what he called "urgent work matters."

"On our anniversary?" I teased, trying to mask my disappointment.

"Just one more call, baby. I promise." He kissed my cheek before disappearing again.

As the dessert course approached, I excused myself to freshen up. The ladies' room was mercifully empty—a moment of quiet amid the celebration. I reapplied my lipstick, smoothed my hair, and was about to leave when I heard it.

A moan. Familiar yet out of place.

My hand froze on the door handle. Another sound—unmistakable this time. I knew those sounds. They belonged to our bedroom, to our private world.

Something cold and heavy settled in my stomach as I moved toward the source—the last stall. The door wasn't properly latched.

One gentle push and it swung open.

Time stopped.

Rachel—my best friend since college—was on her knees, her red dress hiked up around her thighs. And Adrian—my husband, my soulmate, the man who had just whispered "forever" to me—had his hands tangled in her hair, his head thrown back in pleasure.

"Fuck, Rachel, you're so much better than Sophia," he groaned, unaware of my presence.

The world tilted. My lungs forgot how to breathe. Some detached part of my brain made my fingers move, opening my phone's camera, recording the scene before me. Evidence of what I couldn't—wouldn't—believe.

I didn't make a sound. Didn't cry. Didn't scream. Something inside me had shattered so completely that there was no air left for noise.

I simply backed away, the video safely captured, and walked out with mechanical steps.

Seven years of love. Seven years of trust. Seven years of "you're my home."

All lies.

As I reentered the dining room, my face a perfect mask, I realized with startling clarity what my anniversary gift to him—to us—would be.

The truth.

And it would destroy everything.

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