
Sleeping with My Husband's Brother
Chapter 2
The morning after the book club meeting, I woke with a heaviness in my chest that had nothing to do with the wine. David had already left for his morning run, his side of the bed cold and perfectly made—a habit that used to charm me but now felt like another small deception.
I padded downstairs in my robe, the house eerily quiet without his presence. Coffee first, then maybe I could shake this gnawing feeling that had taken root somewhere between Claire's nervous laughter and those damned pearls.
But as I reached for my favorite mug—the ceramic one Claire had given me last Christmas with "World's Best Friend" painted in cheerful yellow letters—my gaze fell on something that made my blood run cold.
A book lay open on our kitchen island. Not one of mine. Not one of David's usual business journals or biographies.
*The Poetry of Pablo Neruda.*
I approached it slowly, as if it might bite. The spine was creased with use, library stickers still attached. David hadn't checked out a poetry book in all the years I'd known him. He'd always claimed poetry was "pretentious nonsense," rolling his eyes whenever I quoted a favorite verse.
The book was open to "Love Sonnet XVII," the page marked with what looked like a coffee stain. But it wasn't the famous poem that caught my attention—it was the slip of paper tucked between the pages like a bookmark.
My hands trembled as I unfolded it.
David's handwriting. Unmistakable. The same careful script that had written our wedding vows, signed our mortgage papers, penned countless grocery lists over the years.
But this wasn't a grocery list.
*For C—*
*Your laugh is music I never knew I needed,*
*A symphony that drowns out the silence*
*Of conversations about nothing,*
*Of dinners where we discuss the weather*
*Like it matters more than the way*
*You bite your lip when you're thinking.*
*She arranges flowers and thinks it's art,*
*Discusses books she doesn't understand,*
*Plays at depth while swimming in shallows.*
*But you—you see the world in colors*
*She's never even dreamed of.*
The paper slipped from my fingers, fluttering to the granite countertop like a dying butterfly. I stared at it, my vision blurring as the words rearranged themselves into new and devastating meanings.
*She arranges flowers and thinks it's art.*
My flower arrangements. The ones I spent hours perfecting for our dinner parties, choosing each bloom for its symbolic meaning, its color harmony. David had always complimented them, called them beautiful.
Lies. All lies.
*Discusses books she doesn't understand.*
Every literary discussion we'd shared, every passionate debate about characters and themes—he'd been humoring me. Patronizing me. While secretly mocking my "shallow" interpretations with the woman I trusted most in the world.
I grabbed the book with shaking hands, flipping through pages desperately. More papers fell out like confessions. Receipts, notes, fragments of a secret life I'd been blind to.
A restaurant receipt from Le Bernardin dated three weeks ago. The same night David had claimed he was working late on the Henderson account. Two dinners. Two glasses of wine. The expensive kind we only ordered on special occasions.
Another poem, this one longer:
*Two years of stolen moments,*
*Coffee shops where she'll never think to look,*
*Your hand in mine across tables*
*Set for secrets.*
*Two years of coming home*
*To her cheerful chatter about nothing,*
*Her proud displays of mediocrity,*
*While you text me from the garden*
*Where she plants her predictable roses.*
Two years.
TWO YEARS.
I sank onto the kitchen stool, the cold granite pressing against my palms as I tried to steady myself. Two years of what I'd thought was the happiest period of our marriage. Two years since David had seemed more attentive, more present. I'd attributed it to us finding our rhythm again after the stress of his promotion, the way couples sometimes rediscover each other.
But it hadn't been about rediscovering me at all.
The front door opened with David's familiar double-tap—a signal he'd developed so I'd know it was him coming home. How many times had Claire heard that same signal? How many times had they laughed about his "predictable" wife who needed such reassurances?
"Sarah? You're up early." His voice carried from the foyer, slightly breathless from his run.
I quickly gathered the papers, shoving them back into the book, but my hands were shaking so badly that one of the poems fluttered to the floor. I bent to retrieve it just as David rounded the corner into the kitchen.
He stopped short, his post-run glow fading as he took in my appearance. "What's wrong? You look like you've seen a ghost."
I straightened slowly, the poem clutched in my fist behind my back. "Just tired. Didn't sleep well."
His eyes moved to the book on the counter, and I watched something flicker across his face—panic, quickly masked. "Is that...? I thought I'd left that in the car."
"You're reading Neruda now?" I kept my voice carefully neutral, though my heart was hammering against my ribs.
A flush crept up his neck, the same tell he'd had since college when caught in a lie. "Research. For a client presentation. They want something about... about passion in marketing."
Another lie, delivered with the same practiced ease as all the others. How many had there been? How many times had I smiled and nodded and believed?
"Passion in marketing," I repeated slowly.
"Right. You know how these creative types can be. Always wanting to inject emotion into everything."
The irony was suffocating. Here was my husband, who'd been conducting a two-year affair with my best friend, dismissing emotion as the domain of "creative types" while secretly penning love poetry to another woman.
"I should shower," he said, already moving toward the stairs. "Early meeting today."
I waited until I heard the bathroom door close, then unfolded the paper in my hand. This one was different—not a poem, but what looked like a text message transcription in David's careful handwriting:
*C: "She's planning another one of her elaborate dinner parties. Six courses, matching napkins, the whole performance."*
*D: "At least the wine will be good. I choose it."*
*C: "Sometimes I wonder if she knows how ridiculous she looks, fussing over place settings like she's hosting royalty."*
*D: "She thinks she's cultivated. It's almost endearing."*
*C: "Almost."*
The paper crumpled in my fist as a sound escaped me—half sob, half laugh. All those dinner parties I'd thrown, carefully planned and lovingly executed. The handwritten place cards, the seasonal centerpieces, the hours spent researching wine pairings.
I'd thought I was creating beauty, bringing people together, building the kind of home where love and friendship could flourish.
Instead, I'd been performing for an audience that saw me as a joke.
The shower was still running upstairs. David would be in there for at least ten more minutes—he was methodical about everything, even hygiene.
I had time.
Time to put the book back where he'd left it. Time to pretend I'd never seen the evidence of my own humiliation. Time to continue playing the role of the oblivious wife while my husband and best friend laughed at my "ridiculous" attempts at sophistication.
Or time to finally stop performing altogether.
The choice stretched before me like a chasm, and for the first time in fifteen years of marriage, I wasn't sure which side I wanted to land on.
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