
Sleeping with My Husband's Brother
Sleeping with My Husband's Brother Chapter 1
The wine glass felt heavier in my hand than it should have, the Bordeaux catching the amber light from our dining room chandelier. Around me, the familiar hum of our monthly book club filled the air—soft laughter, the rustle of pages, the gentle clink of stemware against our mahogany table.
"Emma Bovary was simply a product of her time," declared Margaret, our neighbor from two houses down, her voice carrying that authoritative tone she reserved for literary discussions. "Trapped by societal expectations."
I nodded absently, my fingers tracing the rim of my glass as I watched David refill drinks around the room. My husband moved with his usual grace, that easy charm that had first drawn me to him fifteen years ago still evident in the way he smiled at each guest, asked about their children, remembered their preferences.
Red for Margaret. White for Susan. And for my best friend Claire—
"Merlot, as always," David said, his voice dropping to that warm, intimate register I knew so well. But it wasn't directed at me.
Claire looked up from her copy of Madame Bovary, her fingers brushing against David's as she accepted the glass. The contact lingered a heartbeat too long. "You remember everything," she said, her smile soft and grateful.
Something cold settled in my stomach, sharp and unwelcome.
"Of course I do," David replied, and there it was again—that tone. The one he used to use with me during our early courtship, when every word felt like a secret shared between us alone.
I forced myself to look away, focusing instead on the familiar comfort of our living room. The Persian rug we'd bought on our anniversary trip to Istanbul. The first edition Dickens collection David had given me for my birthday. The abstract painting Claire had helped me choose last spring, its bold strokes of blue and gold commanding attention above our fireplace.
Everything perfect. Everything in its place.
"Sarah, what do you think?" Margaret's voice cut through my reverie. "About Emma's choices?"
I blinked, realizing I'd missed the entire discussion. "I'm sorry, what was the question?"
"Whether Emma was justified in seeking fulfillment outside her marriage," Claire said, her green eyes meeting mine with what looked like genuine curiosity. But there was something else there, something I couldn't quite name.
The irony wasn't lost on me. "I think," I said carefully, "that people often convince themselves they're justified in pursuing what they want, regardless of the consequences."
Claire's smile faltered slightly. David, who had been arranging cheese and crackers on a tray, went still.
"But surely," Susan interjected, "there's something to be said for authentic happiness? For following your heart?"
I took a larger sip of wine than I intended, the tannins sharp on my tongue. "And what about loyalty? Commitment? The promises we make?"
The room fell quiet except for the soft jazz playing from our sound system. David resumed his movements, but I could feel his attention on me, watchful and wary.
Claire shifted in her chair, and that's when I noticed it—the way the silk of her dress caught the light. The emerald green dress I'd given her last month for her birthday, telling her it would be perfect with her eyes. She'd laughed then, spinning in my walk-in closet like we were teenagers again, promising to save it for something special.
Apparently, our book club qualified as special.
But it wasn't the dress that made my breath catch. It was the necklace.
A delicate strand of pearls with a small diamond pendant, elegant and understated. The kind of piece that spoke of thoughtfulness, of someone who knew her taste intimately. I'd never seen it before, and I knew Claire's jewelry collection almost as well as my own. We'd been shopping together countless times, admiring pieces in store windows, borrowing accessories for special occasions.
This wasn't borrowed. This was new.
And expensive.
"That's a beautiful necklace," I heard myself say, my voice sounding strange and distant.
Claire's hand flew to her throat, fingers touching the pearls as if she'd forgotten they were there. "Oh, this? It's... it's new."
"A gift?" The question slipped out before I could stop it.
Color bloomed across Claire's cheekbones. "Yes, actually. A... a thank you gift. From a client."
Claire worked in marketing for a small firm downtown. Nice work, steady income, but hardly the kind of position that warranted pearl necklaces from grateful clients. Especially not clients who knew enough about her personal style to choose something so perfectly suited to her.
"How thoughtful," I managed, my smile feeling brittle on my face.
David had gone completely still by the bar cart, his back to us. But I could see the tension in his shoulders, the way his hand gripped the wine bottle just a little too tightly.
"We should probably get back to the book," Margaret said, clearly sensing the shift in atmosphere even if she didn't understand it.
The discussion resumed, but I found myself studying the two people I trusted most in the world with new eyes. The way David's gaze kept drifting to Claire when he thought no one was looking. The way she tucked a strand of hair behind her ear—a nervous habit I'd known for twenty years—whenever he spoke.
Small things. Tiny gestures that could mean nothing.
Or everything.
As the evening wound down and our guests began to leave, I stood at our front door, playing the perfect hostess. Air kisses and promises to see each other soon. Margaret clutching her copy of next month's selection. Susan already texting her husband for a ride home.
Claire was the last to leave, as she often was. She lingered in our foyer, her coat draped over one arm.
"Thank you for hosting," she said, reaching for me in our customary goodbye hug. "It was lovely, as always."
I held her close, breathing in the familiar scent of her perfume—something light and floral that I'd helped her choose years ago. But underneath it was something else, something warmer and more complex. A cologne I recognized.
David's cologne.
My arms tightened around her involuntarily, and I felt her stiffen slightly in response.
"Are you alright?" she asked as we pulled apart, her green eyes searching my face with what looked like genuine concern.
"Of course," I said, the lie sliding off my tongue with practiced ease. "Just tired. You know how these evenings can be."
She nodded, but her expression remained troubled. "We should have lunch soon. It feels like we haven't really talked in ages."
The pearls caught the light from our porch fixture, winking like tiny stars against her throat. "I'd like that," I said.
David appeared beside me as Claire's car pulled away, his arm sliding around my waist in a gesture that once would have felt natural, comforting.
Now it felt like a performance.
"Good evening," he said, his voice carefully neutral.
"Mmm." I leaned into him, testing. "Claire looked beautiful tonight, don't you think?"
His arm tensed almost imperceptibly. "I suppose. I didn't really notice."
Another lie. I was beginning to recognize them now, these small deceptions that had probably been there all along, hidden beneath the comfortable routine of our marriage.
We moved through the motions of cleaning up—loading the dishwasher, putting away wine glasses, straightening cushions. The familiar choreography of a couple who had shared a home for over a decade.
But something had shifted tonight. Some invisible line had been crossed, and I found myself on the other side of it, looking back at my life with new and unwelcome clarity.
As I turned off the lights in our living room, my gaze fell on the abstract painting again. The one Claire had helped me choose, standing in the gallery with her hand on my shoulder, pointing out how the colors would complement our existing décor.
I wondered now if David had been there that day. If he'd watched us together, planning even then.
The thought settled over me like a weight, heavy and cold and impossible to ignore.
Upstairs, David was already in bed, his back to me as I slipped under the covers. In the darkness, I stared at the ceiling and tried to convince myself that I was imagining things.
But the image of those pearls, gleaming against Claire's throat, refused to fade.
And somewhere in the space between sleep and waking, I began to understand that the perfect life I'd built so carefully was nothing more than a beautiful façade.
One that was already beginning to crumble.
Sleeping with My Husband's Brother of Contents
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