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I Exposed My Husband’s Affair at Our Company Gala Novel Cover

I Exposed My Husband’s Affair at Our Company Gala

I came home a day early. The flight from Chicago landed at six-fifteen, and I didn't tell Reid. I thought about it — typed the text, deleted it. I told myself it was because I wanted to surprise him. That was a lie I was still willing to believe on the cab ride home. The penthouse was quiet when I stepped off the elevator. The kind of quiet that has weight to it. I set my carry-on by the door and noticed Reid's jacket on the entryway chair, his keys on the console table. Home, then. I walked toward the bedroom.
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Chapter 4

I took a car to Brooklyn.

Not a cab. A car service, the kind that doesn't ask questions. I watched the bridge lights slide past the window and didn't think about the cabinet door or the sound of Reid's fist or Karsyn's voice going soft in the hallway. I didn't think about any of it. I just watched the lights.

The brownstone was dark when I got there. I unlocked the front door and didn't turn on anything except the kitchen lamp, the small one on the counter that threw a warm circle on the tile. I sat at the kitchen table and put my phone face-up in front of me and looked at it for a long time.

Then I typed: *Still at the office?*

The reply came in under a minute.

*I can be wherever you need.*

I looked at that for a moment. Then I sent him the address.

---

He knocked at nine forty-seven. I opened the door and stepped back to let him in and didn't say anything by way of explanation. He didn't ask for one. He came in, looked at the kitchen the way people look at a room they're trying to understand without being obvious about it, and sat down at the table when I gestured toward the chair.

I poured two glasses of wine. I sat across from him.

We talked.

Not about the marriage. Not about Reid or Karsyn or the cabinet door or the guest bedroom I'd been sleeping in for two weeks. We talked about other things — a book he'd read on the flight back from a client trip, a restaurant in Singapore he said made the best laksa he'd ever had, a question I'd been turning over about whether the Chicago expansion was worth the overhead. Small things. Real things. The kind of conversation I hadn't had in so long that I'd almost forgotten what it felt like to just talk to someone without calculating the cost.

He was easy to be with. That was the thing I kept noticing. He didn't perform. He didn't manage me. He just sat there in my kitchen and talked to me like I was a person he was genuinely interested in, and somewhere in the space between the second glass of wine and the silence that came after, I stopped thinking about what I was doing.

I just did it.

It was the first decision I'd made entirely for myself in years. Maybe longer.

---

I was dressed before six.

I stood at the kitchen counter with my coffee and the termination paperwork I'd drafted on my phone while it was still dark, and I was very calm. The kind of calm that comes after you've already made the decision and there's nothing left to do but execute it.

I printed the envelope at the small desk in the corner — I kept a printer there, one of the things Reid had always found excessive about the brownstone — and I sealed it and set it on the table.

I heard him on the stairs at six forty.

He came into the kitchen in yesterday's shirt, hair not quite right, and stopped when he saw me standing at the counter in my work clothes with my coffee. Something moved across his face — not surprise, exactly. More like recognition. Like he'd already understood, somewhere between waking and the stairs, how this was going to go.

I picked up the envelope and held it out.

"HR will process the paperwork by noon," I said. "The severance is generous. You'll have a strong reference."

He looked at the envelope. Then he looked at me.

I kept my face still. I was good at that.

The silence stretched for a moment — not uncomfortable, just present. He reached out and took the envelope. He didn't open it. He didn't say anything. He just held it at his side and looked at me with an expression I didn't let myself read.

"Thank you," I said, "for your service."

I walked to the front door and opened it.

He came down the hall. He paused in the doorway — close enough that I could have said something, could have let the silence mean something — and then he stepped out onto the stoop.

I closed the door.

I stood with my hand on the knob and looked at the wood grain and breathed. In. Out. The city was already awake outside, the low hum of it pressing through the walls.

I did not watch him go.

I went back to the kitchen and picked up my coffee and stood at the counter and drank it. The envelope was gone. The table was clear. The kitchen lamp was still on, throwing its small warm circle on the tile.

I rinsed my cup. I straightened the chair he'd sat in.

Then I picked up my bag and left for the office.

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