
Leaving My Husband
Chapter 2
The next morning, I woke to the sound of Marcus in the shower. My head throbbed from the single glass of wine I'd nursed while waiting up half the night, turning over the image of Sophia perched on his desk, casually claiming knowledge of my husband's daily habits.
I waited until Dylan was occupied with his cartoons before confronting Marcus at the breakfast table. He sat scrolling through emails on his phone, barely acknowledging the coffee I'd placed beside him.
"I need to ask you something," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "Why was your intern at the office at eleven o'clock last night?"
Marcus looked up, his expression shifting from distraction to irritation. "Preparing for the New York trip. Why?"
"She seemed... familiar with your personal preferences." I chose my words carefully. "Your cologne, your coffee habits."
He set his phone down with deliberate slowness. "Is that what this is about? You're checking up on me?"
"I'm not checking up on you. I'm asking a reasonable question about a woman who was in your office late at night, talking about you like—"
"Like what, Isabella?" His voice hardened. "Like a professional who works closely with me?"
"Like someone who knows things about you that I should know."
Marcus's jaw tightened. "This is exactly why I don't discuss work with you. Everything becomes some dramatic soap opera in your head."
"It's not in my head. She was sitting on your desk at eleven at night."
"And you were spying on me instead of trusting me." He stood, gathering his briefcase. "Sophia is a talented intern who's being fast-tracked. She works late because she's ambitious, not because—" He stopped, shaking his head. "I can't believe I'm even having this conversation."
"Marcus, please—"
"No." His voice cut through the air like a blade. "You embarrassed me last night, showing up unannounced, acting paranoid. Don't ever do that again."
"I was bringing you something you forgot," I protested, feeling my cheeks burn.
"And now you're interrogating me about my colleagues." He checked his watch. "I have a plane to catch."
"Marcus—"
"This discussion is over, Isabella. My work is off-limits to your jealous inquiries. Is that clear?"
I stared at him, this stranger wearing my husband's face. When had his eyes become so cold? When had I become someone whose concerns could be dismissed so easily?
"Crystal," I whispered.
He left without kissing me goodbye, without saying goodbye to Dylan. The front door closed with a decisive click, leaving me alone with the bitter taste of humiliation.
---
A week passed in strained silence. Marcus returned from New York distracted and distant, spending most evenings locked in his study. I tried to convince myself I was overreacting about Sophia, that the hollow feeling in my stomach was just insecurity, not intuition.
Then the package arrived.
"Mommy, look!" Dylan's excited voice called from the foyer where he'd retrieved the mail. He struggled under the weight of a large, unmarked box.
"What is it, sweetheart?" I helped him carry it to the living room.
"I don't know, but it has my name on it!"
Sure enough, a simple label read "For Dylan Sterling." No return address.
Dylan tore into the packaging with the unbridled enthusiasm only a six-year-old could muster. Inside was the latest gaming console—the one he'd been begging for, the one Marcus and I had agreed was too expensive even for a Christmas gift.
"Wow!" Dylan gasped, pulling out controllers and games. "This is the best ever!"
A small card fluttered to the floor. I picked it up, my fingers suddenly numb.
"'For the coolest little man I know. Can't wait to play with you sometime. —Sophia.'" The words burned into my vision.
"Who's Sophia?" Dylan asked, already connecting cables to our television.
"Someone who works with Daddy," I managed to say.
"She's nice!" Dylan hugged the console to his chest, his face alight with joy. "Can I call her to say thank you?"
The innocent question pierced me like a physical pain. "No, honey. We'll... we'll tell Daddy to thank her for you."
I retreated to the kitchen, gripping the counter to steady myself. This wasn't a casual gift from a colleague. This was a deliberate move into my territory—my home, my child. The one place that had remained untouched by Marcus's work life was now breached.
---
Three days later, Marcus's phone buzzed during dinner. He checked it, a small smile playing at his lips before he set it face-down on the table.
"Who was that?" I asked, trying to sound casual.
"Work," he replied, cutting into his steak.
Later, while he showered, I did something I'd never done before—I checked his phone. The message notification still glowed on his lock screen, visible without unlocking:
A photo of a stunning sunset view from a balcony, the Mediterranean Sea stretching to the horizon. Below it, Sophia's message in the family group chat: "Working hard for... us 😉"
Us.
The phone slipped from my trembling fingers, landing silently on the carpet as the truth I'd been fighting finally crystallized: I was losing my husband, and my rival wasn't bothering to hide it anymore.
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