
My Husband Gave Our Anniversary Ring to His Mistress First
Chapter 2
The morning light came in flat and gray through the kitchen windows. I stood at the stove, watching the eggs set in the pan, listening to Xander's footsteps on the hardwood behind me.
He sat down at the island and shook out the newspaper — an affectation he'd picked up somewhere, the physical paper, as if it made him seem more serious. I slid the plate in front of him and settled into the chair across with my espresso.
'I saw the most beautiful ring online last night,' I said, keeping my voice light. Conversational. The kind of thing a wife says over breakfast. 'Some vintage-inspired piece. The setting reminded me of mine, actually.'
I watched his face over the rim of my cup.
Nothing. Not a flicker. He cut into his eggs and nodded with the mild, pleasant interest of a man hearing about the weather. 'You should send me the link,' he said. 'Your birthday's coming up.'
He reached across the island and refilled my coffee from the carafe without being asked. A small, practiced gesture. The kind that looks like attentiveness.
'What are you up to this afternoon?' he asked.
'Errands,' I said. 'Maybe a walk.'
'Good. You've been cooped up.' He smiled at me — warm, easy, completely convincing — and turned back to his paper.
I looked at him for a moment. The line of his jaw. The way he held his fork. Five years of breakfasts, and he sat there like a man with nothing to hide. No hesitation, no overcorrection, no tell.
He had been doing this for a long time.
The thought didn't hit me like a wave. It settled in, slow and cold, the way water fills a room through a crack in the wall. I wrapped both hands around my cup and let the warmth seep into my palms.
Something in my chest went very quiet.
Not broken. Sharper.
---
Three days later, Xander set his travel bag by the front door and straightened his jacket in the entryway mirror.
'Investor conference,' he said. 'Chicago. Back Thursday night.'
'I know.' I handed him his phone from the console table. 'You mentioned it last week.'
He caught my hand when I passed it over, pressed his lips to my knuckles. 'I'll call you tonight.'
'Safe flight,' I said.
I stood at the window and watched the car pull away from the building. Then I went to the kitchen, poured a second espresso, and opened my laptop.
Indie's live feed was already running.
She was in a hotel suite — wide windows, a city skyline behind her, room service spread across a white-clothed table. She was laughing about the mini bar prices, holding up a tiny bottle of something and making a face for the camera.
I leaned forward.
The skyline. The angle of the light. The particular geometry of the buildings against the gray afternoon sky.
Chicago.
I took the screenshot. Captured the geotag she'd embedded in the stream metadata — she always did, she couldn't help herself, every location a flex, every detail a performance. I added it to the encrypted folder, cross-referenced it against Xander's calendar entry, and labeled the file with the date and city.
Then I closed the laptop, changed into my workout clothes, and went to yoga.
The instructor talked about releasing tension in the shoulders. I focused on my breathing and thought about nothing at all.
---
Xander came home Thursday evening smelling like airport and expensive cologne. He dropped his bag in the entryway and found me in the kitchen, pulling a roast chicken from the oven.
'God, that smells incredible,' he said.
He came up behind me and put his hand on my waist.
My whole body went rigid.
It lasted less than a second — a single, involuntary contraction, like touching something hot. I covered it by turning toward the counter, reaching past him for the carving knife, letting the movement explain itself.
'How was the flight?' I asked.
'Delayed. O'Hare was a mess.' He moved to the wine rack, pulled a bottle without looking at the label. 'Conference was good though. Strong interest from the new LPs.'
'That's great,' I said.
I kept my back to him and focused on the chicken. My hands were steady. The knife moved cleanly through the joint.
Later, when he kissed me goodnight in the dark of our bedroom, I tasted something that had nothing to do with the wine. A sourness at the back of my throat. I kept my breathing even and my face still and waited for him to roll over.
His breathing slowed and deepened within minutes. He always slept easily. The sleep of a man who had never once, in five years, lain awake wondering.
I moved to the far edge of the mattress, careful and quiet.
'You've been restless lately,' he'd said the first time I did it, two nights ago. Not a question, really. More of an observation he was already losing interest in.
'Bad dreams,' I told him. 'I don't want to keep you up.'
He'd patted my hand and gone back to sleep in under a minute.
Now I lay in the dark and stared at the ceiling and thought about the geotag. About the hotel suite windows. About the way his hand on my waist had felt like something foreign, something that didn't belong on my skin.
I had loved this man. I had loved him with the same precision and totality I brought to everything — completely, deliberately, without reservation. I had handed him the best years of my career and the seed capital for his empire and five years of breakfasts and the cufflinks I designed myself, and he had taken all of it and gone to Chicago.
The nausea passed. It always passed.
I turned onto my side, away from him, and closed my eyes.
The folder had forty-seven files in it now. By the end of the week, it would have more.
I was not in a hurry. The Fox had always been patient. That was the part people forgot — they remembered the strike, the precision, the kill. They forgot the stillness that came before it.
I was very, very still.
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