
My Husband Wanted Custody While Cheating With His Mistress
Chapter 3
Ethan had been clingy for three days.
It started small. He stopped wanting to play in his room alone. He'd drag his toy trucks to wherever I was — the kitchen, the laundry room, the bathroom — and set up his little roads on the floor at my feet. I didn't mind. I liked the company. But then I noticed the other thing.
Every time Kevin's voice rose — even just to call across the apartment, even when he wasn't angry — Ethan's shoulders would go up. A small, quick flinch, like a bird startled by a sound it's learned to fear.
I watched it happen on a Tuesday afternoon. Kevin was on the phone in the kitchen, laughing at something, his voice carrying through the hall. Ethan was sitting beside me on the couch with a picture book. His whole body went still. His eyes didn't move from the page, but he wasn't reading anymore.
I put my arm around him. He leaned into me without a word.
Later, while I was getting him ready for bed, he looked up at me with those serious dark eyes and said, "Mommy, why is Daddy always on his phone?"
I kept my hands moving, smoothing down his pajama collar. "Daddy has a lot of work stuff," I said.
"Even at nighttime?"
"Sometimes."
He thought about that. Then: "Is Daddy mad at us?"
The question hit me somewhere behind the sternum. I kept my face still. "No, baby. Daddy's not mad at us."
He didn't look convinced. He was four years old and already learning to read a room better than most adults I knew.
"Everything's fine," I told him, and pulled him close so he couldn't see my face.
I hated myself a little for that. For the ease of the lie. For how practiced it had become.
After he fell asleep, I sat on the edge of his bed in the dark and took out the small notebook I kept on his nightstand. I'd started it months ago without really deciding to — just writing down things he said, the funny observations, the questions that caught me off guard. But lately the entries had changed.
I wrote the date at the top of a new page. Then I wrote down exactly what he'd said. *Why is Daddy always on his phone. Is Daddy mad at us.* His exact words, in his exact order. I didn't know why I was so careful about that. I just was.
I closed the notebook and sat there a while longer, listening to him breathe.
---
The next afternoon, the doorbell rang at its usual time.
I'd started timing my days around it without meaning to. Two-thirty, give or take ten minutes. The black sedan, the blue uniform, the paper bag with the small card tucked inside.
I opened the door and Daniel held out the tray. "Boba, extra tapioca. And they had the matcha muffins today."
"Good," I said. I took the tray. Then, because I was tired and my guard was somewhere on the floor, I said, "Long day?"
He paused. Most delivery drivers would have already been halfway down the steps. He wasn't.
"Decent," he said. "Yours?"
I laughed — a short, surprised sound. "I've had better centuries."
The corner of his mouth moved. "That bad?"
"Ethan asked me this morning why his dad is always on his phone." I don't know why I said it. It just came out. "I didn't have a good answer."
Daniel was quiet for a moment. Not the uncomfortable quiet of someone looking for an exit. Just quiet. "What did you tell him?"
"That Daddy has work stuff." I looked down at the tray. "He didn't buy it."
"Smart kid."
"Too smart." I leaned against the doorframe. "He's four and he already knows when I'm lying to make him feel better. That's not — that's not how it's supposed to go."
Daniel didn't say *it'll be okay* or *kids are resilient* or any of the things people say when they don't know what else to do. He just said, "He knows you're there. That counts for more than you think."
I looked at him. He was looking back, steady and unhurried, like he had nowhere else to be.
We talked for ten minutes. About nothing, really. He mentioned a coffee place near the waterfront that had good soup in the winter. I told him Ethan had recently decided that ketchup was a beverage. He laughed — a real one, quiet and genuine — and I realized I'd made someone laugh and it felt like something I used to know how to do.
When he finally said goodbye and walked back to the sedan, I stood in the doorway a moment longer than I needed to.
I tried to remember the last time someone had asked about my day and then actually waited for the answer. Not Kevin. Not Patricia. Not anyone in so long that I couldn't place it.
I went inside and drank the boba tea while it was still cold.
---
Kevin came home at four-thirty, which was early for him. I was in the kitchen, the delivery bag still on the counter, the empty cup beside the sink.
He stopped when he saw it. His eyes moved from the bag to me.
"What's that?"
"Delivery," I said. "Boba and pastries."
"From who?"
"The same place as before. There's a promotion—"
"The delivery guy again." His voice was flat. Not jealous — Kevin didn't do jealous, not about me. It was something else. The particular irritation of a man who has decided something belongs to him and found it touched without his permission. "How many times has he come here?"
"A few times."
"Cancel it."
I looked at him. He was already pulling out his phone, already moving on, already somewhere else in his head. The instruction had been issued. He expected it to be followed.
"Okay," I said.
He disappeared into the bedroom. I heard the door click shut. Then the low murmur of his voice, the laugh I used to know.
I picked up the empty boba cup and rinsed it out. Set it on the drying rack.
I did not cancel the orders.
I went to Ethan's room, sat on the floor beside his toy trucks, and waited for him to come find me. When he did, he climbed into my lap without asking, and I held him there in the afternoon light while Kevin's laugh drifted down the hall, and I thought about a man who asked about my day and waited for the answer.
I thought about that for a long time.
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