
I Caught Them in the Guest Bathroom
Chapter 2
I stood in the ballroom, surrounded by two hundred smiling faces, yet utterly alone. The video evidence felt like it was burning through my phone, through my palm, through my carefully constructed reality.
Twenty minutes passed before they returned. Adrian first, straightening his tie, then Rachel five minutes later, her lipstick freshly applied. They entered from different doors—as if that small deception mattered now.
Adrian's eyes found mine across the room. He smiled, that same smile I'd fallen for seven years ago in the university library. The smile I'd believed was only for me.
"There you are," he said, sliding his arm around my waist. "Ready for the cake cutting?"
I nodded, my face a perfect mask. "Actually, I have a special surprise first."
"Always full of surprises," he murmured, kissing my temple. "That's why I love you."
The words that once warmed my heart now turned my blood to ice.
I approached the small stage where the band was set up, accepting the microphone from the lead singer with steady hands.
"Thank you all for coming tonight to celebrate seven years with Adrian," I began, my voice surprisingly calm. "Seven years of what I thought was love, trust, and honesty."
Adrian's smile faltered slightly at my phrasing.
"I prepared a special anniversary gift," I continued. "Something I think you should all see."
I nodded to the technician who connected my phone to the projector. The room fell silent as the video began to play, the unmistakable sounds filling the ballroom before the image even appeared on screen.
"Fuck, Rachel, you're so much better than Sophia."
Gasps rippled through the crowd. Adrian lunged toward the stage, his face drained of color.
"Baby, please, let me explain," he begged, reaching for the phone.
I stepped back. "This is my anniversary gift."
Rachel stood frozen in the center of the room, all eyes shifting between her and the damning evidence on screen.
"Turn it off," Adrian hissed.
"Why?" Rachel's voice cut through the chaos. "Stop pretending, Adrian." Her laugh was hollow as she turned to me. "Did you really think he was faithful? We've been together for two years."
The room spun around me. "Two years?"
"Oh yes," she continued, her voice gaining confidence as she stepped forward. "It started when your father was in the hospital. Remember how 'supportive' he was? Driving you there every day? He'd drop you off and come straight to me."
Adrian's face contorted. "Rachel, shut up."
"We've had each other in your bed," she continued mercilessly. "In your car. Even at that beach in Santorini where you took your wedding photos."
Each word was a knife. My father's illness—the darkest period of my life—and Adrian had used it as cover for his betrayal.
"You really thought all those business trips were work?" Rachel scoffed.
Adrian fell to his knees before me, grabbing my hands. "It meant nothing," he pleaded, tears streaming down his face.
I pulled away. "Two years of nothing?"
"You're my wife," he sobbed. "My soulmate."
I looked down at him—this stranger wearing my husband's face. "No," I said quietly. "I was your wife."
I twisted the platinum band from my finger, the one he'd placed there with promises of forever. With deliberate calm, I walked to the champagne tower—the one we were supposed to toast with—and dropped the ring. It clinked against the crystal, disappearing into the bubbling liquid.
"Congratulations," I said, looking between them. "I wish you both happiness."
I walked out with my head high, ignoring the chaos erupting behind me. In the taxi, I booked the most expensive suite at the Four Seasons. I wouldn't return to our home tonight—or perhaps ever again.
At the hotel, I barely made it inside before the first text arrived: *Please, Sophia. Let me explain.*
Then the calls began. One after another, his name flashing on my screen like a warning.
I silenced my phone and stepped into the shower, letting the scalding water wash over me, hoping it might somehow cleanse away the betrayal. But some stains, I realized, would never come out.
I was wrapping myself in a hotel robe when I heard it—pounding on my door.
"Sophia!" Adrian's voice, raw with desperation. "Please, just talk to me!"
How had he found me so quickly? I pressed my back against the wall, sliding down until I sat on the plush carpet, knees pulled to my chest.
"I know you're in there," he called, his voice breaking. "I'm not leaving until you talk to me."
I closed my eyes, silent tears streaming down my face as the man I'd loved for seven years—the man who had systematically betrayed me—began his vigil in the hallway.
He had no idea how good I'd become at silence. At waiting. At planning what would come next.
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