
New Mom Confronts Cheating Husband
Chapter 2
Two days before his supposed work trip, Kai starts packing. I watch him from the doorway of our bedroom, my arms crossed, my heart a cold stone in my chest.
“You’re leaving early,” I say, my voice flat.
He doesn’t look up from the suitcase open on our bed. “The client moved the meeting. It’s better this way—I can get settled, prep properly.”
Settled. The word echoes in the silent room. I step forward. “Let me help.”
He pauses, then nods, a brief, tight smile. “Thanks.”
I move to the wardrobe, pulling out his shirts. The crisp cotton feels alien under my fingers. I used to love folding his clothes, the simple domesticity of it. Now each fold feels like a betrayal of myself. I lay a pale blue shirt on the bed, smoothing the sleeves. My hands move automatically, a rhythm I learned from my mother.
Be a good wife. Be supportive.
He’s pulling his suit from the back of the closet—the charcoal one he wears for important presentations. He lays it carefully over the chair. I finish with the shirts and move to his side, picking up the suit jacket to fold it.
My fingers slide into the inside breast pocket, a habitual check for forgotten tickets or receipts. Something rustles. Paper.
I freeze. Kai is zipping up a toiletry bag, his focus elsewhere.
I slip the paper out. A small, torn piece of notepad sheet. A handwritten address: The Luxe Suites, 44
Regency Street. And a time: 8pm.
My breath stops. The company always books the Hilton. Standard, corporate, boring. This is not the Hilton.
This is a boutique suite hotel in the city center. Known for discretion.
The paper trembles in my hand. I look at Kai’s profile—the sharp jaw, the focused eyes. He’s humming softly, a tune I don’ recognize.
He’s packing for a date.
The thought isn’t a whisper; it’s a scream inside my skull. I force my fingers to fold the jacket, tucking the paper back into the pocket. My hands are steady. My mind is splitting.
“I’ll get your socks,” I murmur, and walk out of the room.
In the nursery, Lily is sleeping in her crib, her tiny pink cheeks serene. The world is quiet here. I stand over the formula cans on the shelf. One is half-full. I pick it up, my movements slow and deliberate.
The shame is a physical wave, hot and sickening. I am hiding my drugs in my baby’s food. The thought is so vile it makes my eyes burn. But the ketamine is my only armor. The only thing that can blur the edges of this agony, let me breathe through the hours when he’s gone and my imagination runs wild.
I pry the plastic seal off the can. The powdered formula smells sweet, innocent. I pull the small baggie from my pocket—the white crystals a stark contrast to the creamy powder. I bury it deep at the bottom, covering it with several scoops of formula. Then I reseal the lid.
My reflection in the nursery mirror is ghostly. Haunted green eyes, pale skin. What kind of mother does this?
The answer is there in my gaze: a broken one.
I return to the bedroom. Kai is closing his suitcase. “All set?”
“Yeah.” I smile. It feels like a crack in my face. “Have a good trip.”
He comes to me, cups my chin. His kiss on my forehead is dry, quick. “I’ll call you every night, baby. Check in. You and Lily are my world.”
My world. The lie is so smooth, so practiced. I nod. “I know.”
He picks up his suitcase, gives Lily’s room a lingering look, then walks to the front door. I follow him, a silent shadow.
At the threshold, he turns. “Take care of yourself, Ella. Really.”
“I will.”
He steps out. The door closes with a soft, final click.
The sound echoes in the empty hallway.
My knees buckle. I don’t make a sound. I just sink to the floor, the cool tiles against my palms. A violent, sour surge climbs my throat. I gag, then vomit—a thin, bitter stream onto the pristine floor. My body shakes.
Tears mix with the mess.
I sit there for minutes, my back against the wall, staring at the closed door. He’s gone.
The silence is absolute.
Then, a glint from the charging station on the side table. His iPad. He forgot it.
I crawl toward it, my limbs weak. I pick it up. The screen lights up with his passcode—I know it, the same one he uses for everything. I tap it in.
The home screen appears. I open Messages. It’s still logged into his iCloud account. Synced.
My thumb scrolls.
Most conversations are mundane—work colleagues, his mum, a few mates. Then I see a thread with no name, just a phone number. The last message, sent this morning:
Kai: Confirming 8pm. Suite 607. Cash ready.
A reply, minutes later:
Unknown: Perfect. Looking forward to meeting you. I’ll bring everything discussed.
My heart isn’t beating. It’s just a numb, heavy weight.
Everything discussed.
I scroll up. The earlier messages are deleted. Cleared. But this one remains, a confirmation. A transaction.
I close the app. My hands are ice.
On the floor, my vomit is a dark stain. I look at it, then at the iPad. The two truths of my life: my degradation, and his betrayal.
I stand up, wiping my mouth with my sleeve. I walk to the kitchen, get a cloth, and clean the floor. The action is robotic. Clean up the mess. Hide the evidence.
When the floor is spotless again, I return to the living room. The iPad sits on the coffee table, a quiet bomb.
I pick up my phone. My fingers dial a number I haven’t called in months. My friend, Zoe. The one who always says, “You deserve better.”
The call connects. Her voice is bright. “Ella? Hey!”
I open my mouth. I want to say, “He’s cheating. I found proof.” I want to scream it.
But Lily cries from the nursery—a soft, hungry whimper. The sound pulls me back to my body, to my role.
“Hey, Zoe,” I say, my voice strangely calm. “Just… just checking in. How are you?”
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