
My Fiancé Called Me Boring in Bed
Chapter 1
The bedroom door swung open, hitting the wall with a soft thud.
Daniel stumbled in, dragging the heavy scent of whiskey and stale smoke with him. He didn’t bother turning on the light.
"Are you awake?" he asked, his voice thick and slurred.
"Yes," I said from my side of the mattress.
He kicked off his shoes. One hit the closet door, the other landed somewhere near the rug.
"Move over," he muttered, dropping his weight onto the mattress.
I shifted closer to the edge. The springs groaned under him.
"Why are you lying perfectly still?" Daniel asked.
"I was trying to sleep."
"You're always trying to sleep." He sighed, a long, heavy sound. "Do you ever think about us, Vera?"
"What about us?"
"How incredibly boring we are." He rolled onto his back, staring up at the dark ceiling. "How boring you are."
My fingers curled into the edges of the blanket. "You drank a lot tonight."
"Don't do that," he snapped, though his volume stayed low. "Don't blame the alcohol. I'm telling you the truth."
"The truth about what?"
"About you." He turned his head toward me. "You’re just… flat."
"Flat."
"Yeah. Flat. You have no edge." He let out a short, humorless laugh. "I look at you, and I feel absolutely nothing. There’s no spark. No surprise."
I kept my eyes on the dark shape of the curtains across the room.
"You’re like a log in bed," he continued, his tone casual, almost conversational. "I touch you, and you just lie there. You don't do anything."
"Daniel, go to sleep."
"I'm serious, Vera," he insisted. "Where's the passion? Where's the excitement?"
"You want excitement at two in the morning?"
"I want it ever. Just once." He shifted again, adjusting his pillow. "With you, there's no sense of surprise. None."
He wasn’t picking a fight. That was the worst part.
His voice didn't hold anger or malice. He spoke with the weary disgust of someone evaluating a piece of used furniture that no longer fit the living room aesthetic.
"It's the same thing every single day," Daniel mumbled, his words trailing off slightly. "I come home, and it’s just… dead air."
"If I'm so boring, why do you come home?" I asked softly.
"Habit," he whispered.
I didn't argue. I didn't defend myself. I just turned my face fully toward the curtains.
In the dark, I took those words and pressed them deep into my chest. *Flat. Boring. A log. Habit.* I didn't let a single syllable escape.
"Just a habit," Daniel repeated, softer this time.
Three seconds later, his breathing leveled out into a steady, rhythmic snore. He was fast asleep.
I lay perfectly still.
Deep inside my ribs, a tight, frayed string finally gave way. It snapped with a quiet, invisible pop.
My chest didn't ache. My throat didn't burn.
I wasn't sad. I was just certain.
He wasn't talking through the alcohol. He meant every single word.
I pushed the blanket off and swung my legs over the side of the bed. The hardwood floor felt like ice against my bare feet.
Walking to the bathroom, I shut the door behind me. I didn't turn on the overhead light, only the small vanity lamp.
For two full minutes, I stood at the sink. I gripped the porcelain edges, staring at my reflection in the dim mirror.
"Two minutes," I whispered to the empty room.
I watched the second hand on my wristwatch tick forward.
"He's drunk," I tried to say aloud, testing the excuse.
"No, he's not," I answered myself. "He's awake."
My face held no expression. My eyes were completely dry.
I turned on the faucet, let the cold water run over my wrists, and turned it off.
Walking back into the bedroom, I navigated the shadows with practiced ease. I stopped next to Daniel’s side of the bed.
He was still snoring, his arm thrown over his forehead.
I reached for the nightstand, habitually pulling open the top drawer to grab a tissue.
My fingertips brushed against something stiff.
A folded piece of paper.
I paused. Daniel never kept paper in this drawer. Only his watch, his wallet, and loose change.
"What is this?" I muttered.
I pulled it out.
Tapping my phone screen, I let the faint blue glow illuminate the small square of paper.
It was a receipt.
*The Grand Plaza Hotel.*
"The Grand Plaza," I read aloud, my voice barely a breath.
*Luxury Double Suite.*
"A suite."
*Check-in: Friday, October 14th.*
*Guests: 2.*
I stared at the date. Last Friday.
"I have a conference in Chicago," Daniel had told me last Thursday, packing his overnight bag.
"Did you pack your blue tie?" I had asked him.
"Yeah, I got it. Love you, Vera."
"Love you too."
I remembered our phone call on Friday night.
"Have a safe flight back tomorrow," I had told him over the line.
"Thanks, honey. The hotel connection is bad, I might not be able to call later," he had replied.
"That's fine. Focus on work."
"I will. Miss you."
"Miss you too."
I stared at the receipt in my hand. The Grand Plaza wasn't in Chicago. It was downtown, twenty minutes away from our apartment.
"Two guests," I whispered, the sound barely carrying over his snoring.
He paid with his private credit card. The one he told me he only used for emergency business expenses.
A luxury suite for the man who found me too flat. Too boring.
"No sense of surprise," I quoted softly to the dark room.
I carefully folded the receipt along its original crease.
Opening the drawer, I slid the paper back exactly where I had found it, and pushed the drawer shut. It closed with a soft click.
I walked around the bed and climbed back under the covers.
The mattress shifted, but Daniel didn't wake. He just grunted and rolled onto his side, facing away from me.
I picked up my phone.
The screen brightness was turned all the way down. I opened the Notes app.
The page was blank, a vast expanse of empty digital space.
My thumb hovered over the keyboard.
"You want a surprise, Daniel?" I whispered to his sleeping back.
I typed two words.
*Begin.*
I hit save.
Locking the screen, I watched the room plunge back into total darkness.
I placed the phone flat against my chest and folded my hands over it. Closing my eyes, I let the rhythmic sound of my husband's breathing wash over me.
Not a single tear fell.
Tomorrow, he would get his surprise.
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