
My Husband Kissed His Mistress While I Was Pregnant
Chapter 2
The next morning, I made him coffee.
That was how it began. The performance. I ground the beans fresh, measured the water by eye, kissed his cheek when he left for the office. He told me I was the best wife in the world. I smiled. I said nothing.
Then I started collecting.
His jacket hung in the front hall. I went through every pocket. A crumpled receipt from a bar in Soho — two whiskeys, one mojito, dated to a Tuesday he had told me he was working late. I photographed it on the kitchen counter, then put it back exactly where I'd found it. A matchbook from a restaurant I'd never heard of. I photographed that too.
When he showered, I scrolled his texts. He had changed his passcode three months ago. I'd noticed and said nothing. Now I tried our anniversary. It worked. The man was sloppy in the way of men who had never been caught.
Karsyn's messages were buried under a contact saved as 'Mike — Investor.' Heart emojis. Photos. A video I could not bring myself to open. I screenshot the thread, the metadata, the dates. I uploaded every file to a cloud drive he did not know existed. The password was the name of a dog I'd had as a child — something he had never bothered to ask me about.
I cross-referenced his calendar with her Instagram. Every 'investor dinner' matched a restaurant she had geotagged. Every Boston 'weekend with the guys' matched a hotel photo, her coral-painted toes against white sheets. I made a spreadsheet. Two columns. His lie. Her post.
The work was almost calm. I treated it the way I had once treated his pitch decks — fonts aligned, sources cited, every detail in its place. I had not eaten properly in nine days. My hands did not shake. The baby kicked, and I rested my palm on the spot and kept typing.
On the tenth day, I sealed a physical copy in a manila envelope and drove it to Marcus Webb's office. He took it without a word and locked it in his desk. He looked at me for a long moment.
'How are you sleeping,' he asked. Not really a question.
'I'm not,' I said.
He nodded. 'Call when you're ready.'
That night I called Joanna Hughes.
I had not spoken to her in four months. Our last conversation had been about the baby shower — what color the napkins should be, which caterer to use, the small civil exchanges of two women who had decided long ago they would never be friends.
She picked up on the second ring.
'Eleanor.'
I sat on the edge of the bathtub. The door was locked. Downstairs, Landon was humming, opening a bottle of wine he knew I could not share.
'You were right about him,' I said. 'I'm done.'
The silence on the other end was long. Long enough for me to hear her breathing. Long enough for me to understand that she was not surprised. That she had perhaps been waiting for this call for nine years, or thirty, or her entire life.
'Tell me what you need,' she said.
Her voice was flat. No pity. No told-you-so. Just the steady, low register of a woman who had finally been given something useful to do.
I told her. A flight. A place to land. Quiet. No questions Landon could trace back to her. I would handle the legal side. I would handle the leaving. I needed the after.
She did not ask why. She did not ask when. She said, 'I'll call you tomorrow,' and she hung up.
I stayed on the bathroom floor a long time after that. The tile was cold against my legs. I pressed my thumbnail into my palm and watched the half-moon shape bloom white, then red. The baby moved, slow and lazy, and I thought — for a single, dangerous second — about every nursery I had ever imagined.
Then I stood up, washed my face, and went downstairs to drink water at the table while my husband told me about his day.
He brought home the paint swatches on a Thursday.
He fanned them across the kitchen table like a hand of cards — soft yellows, sage greens, the warm cream of butter melting. He had stopped at the design store on his way home from a meeting I now knew had not been a meeting. There was something boyish in the way he laid them out, smoothing the corners with his palms.
'I was thinking sage,' he said. 'Calm, you know. Good for a kid's room.'
I sat across from him. The overhead light caught the mole on his right hand. The one I had stared at on my phone screen at two in the morning. The one that had ended my life without telling me.
'Sage is nice,' I said.
'Or this yellow. What's it called — Honey Drop.' He tapped the swatch. 'Could go either way.'
'Honey Drop.'
'Yeah?' His face lit up. He was beautiful when he was happy. He had always been beautiful when he was happy. 'I'll order the crib tomorrow. The walnut one we saw — remember? The one with the rails that fold down.'
I remembered. I had bookmarked it on a Tuesday in March. The same Tuesday his calendar showed a four-hour investor lunch at the Ritz-Carlton.
'I remember,' I said.
He reached across the table and took my hand. His thumb moved over my knuckles in slow, absent circles. The mole was right there, an inch from my wedding ring. I looked at it the way you look at a bruise you don't remember getting.
'Hey.' His voice softened. 'You okay? You've been quiet.'
I let him hold my hand. I let him look at me with those warm brown eyes I had loved since I was twenty-two. I let him be, for one more minute, the man I thought I had married.
'Just tired,' I said. 'He's been kicking all day.'
'My boy.' He squeezed my fingers. 'Already a fighter.'
I excused myself to my studio. I closed the door behind me. I sat at my drafting table and I did not sketch. I stared at the blank page until I heard the television go on downstairs, then the kettle, then his footsteps moving up the stairs. I heard the bedroom door open. I heard it close.
I waited until the house was completely still.
Then I took out a fresh sheet of paper, and at the very top, in small, even letters, I wrote two words.
Honey Drop.
I did not know yet what I would do with the page. But I knew I would keep it. I knew I would carry it across an ocean. I knew that one day, in a city I had not yet seen, I would press it flat between my hands and finally let myself cry.
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