
Sweet Red Lips in My Husband's Pocket
Chapter 2
The weeks that followed blurred together like watercolors in the rain. Each day brought a new layer of frost between Johnathan and me, a chill that settled deeper into our home until I found myself tiptoeing around my own husband.
He'd apologized the morning after he hit me, bringing me coffee in bed with that boyish smile that used to make my heart skip. "I'm so sorry, sweetheart. Work stress, you know? The Henderson case has me wound too tight." His fingers had traced my bruised cheek with what seemed like genuine remorse. "It'll never happen again. I promise."
I'd wanted to believe him. God, how desperately I'd wanted to believe him.
But promises, I was learning, were just words dressed up in hope.
Johnathan began working later, sometimes not coming home until after Emma was already asleep. When he did arrive, he'd grab a beer and disappear into his study, claiming he had case files to review. The warm conversations we used to share over dinner became stilted exchanges about Emma's day or household logistics.
"The garbage disposal is making that noise again," I'd say.
"I'll look at it this weekend," he'd reply without looking up from his phone.
But weekend would come and go, and the disposal would keep grinding its mechanical complaint while Johnathan found reasons to be anywhere but home.
The distance wasn't just emotional. When I'd reach for his hand while watching TV, he'd find an excuse to get up. When I'd try to snuggle against him in bed, he'd shift away, claiming he was too hot or too tired. Our physical intimacy, once natural and frequent, became a memory I began to question had ever existed.
Three weeks after the lipstick incident, I decided to try harder. I put Emma to bed early, lit candles in our bedroom, and wore the black negligee I'd bought for our anniversary but never had the courage to put on. When Johnathan came upstairs, I was waiting by the window, the silk clinging to curves that admittedly weren't as firm as they'd been before pregnancy, but were still mine, still part of the woman he'd once claimed to love.
"Anna, what are you—" He stopped in the doorway, his expression shifting from surprise to something I couldn't quite read. Disappointment? Disgust?
"I thought maybe we could..." I let the sentence hang, suddenly feeling foolish under his stare. "It's been so long since we've been close."
Johnathan loosened his tie with deliberate slowness, his eyes never leaving my body. But there was no desire in his gaze, no warmth. Instead, I saw something cold and calculating, like he was examining evidence in a case he didn't want to take.
"Jesus, Anna." He shook his head, hanging his jacket on the back of our bedroom chair. "Look at yourself."
The words hit me like ice water. "What do you mean?"
"I mean look at yourself. Really look." He gestured toward the full-length mirror on our closet door. "Your stomach is still soft from the pregnancy. Your breasts sag. You've got stretch marks everywhere. And you think putting on some cheap lingerie is going to magically make you attractive again?"
Each word was a scalpel, precise and devastating. I wrapped my arms around myself, suddenly aware of every flaw he'd catalogued, every imperfection I'd tried to hide.
"Emma's only two," I whispered. "My body is still recovering—"
"Other women bounce back. Rebecca Martinez has three kids and she looks better than you did before you got pregnant." He sat on the edge of the bed, not even bothering to lower his voice. "Maybe if you spent less time feeling sorry for yourself and more time at the gym, we wouldn't have this problem."
Rebecca Martinez. The name hit me like a physical blow. The woman whose lipstick had been in his pocket, whose name now rolled off his tongue with an intimacy that made my chest tighten.
"You're comparing me to her?" The question came out smaller than I'd intended.
"I'm not comparing you to anyone. I'm just stating facts." Johnathan began unbuttoning his shirt, his movements efficient and cold. "You've let yourself go completely. You spend all day in yoga pants and old t-shirts, you never do your hair anymore, and you wonder why I'm not interested? It's not rocket science, Anna."
I stood there in the candlelight, feeling more exposed than I'd ever felt in my life. The negligee that had seemed elegant in the store now felt like a costume, a pathetic attempt to be someone I apparently no longer was.
"I take care of Emma all day," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "I cook and clean and manage the household so you can focus on your career. I'm tired, Johnathan. I'm doing the best I can."
"Are you?" He pulled his shirt off, revealing the body I'd once loved to touch, now seeming to belong to a stranger. "Because from where I'm sitting, it looks like you've given up. On yourself, on us, on everything that used to matter."
I wanted to argue, to defend myself, to point out all the ways I'd sacrificed for our family. But the words wouldn't come. Instead, I felt something inside me crumble, a foundation I'd built my entire identity on suddenly revealed to be made of sand.
Without another word, I blew out the candles and climbed into bed, pulling the covers up to my chin. Johnathan finished getting ready in silence, and when he finally joined me, he stayed on his side of the mattress, an ocean of cold sheets between us.
I lay there in the darkness, trying to muffle the sobs that threatened to escape. But apparently, even my grief was an inconvenience.
"Christ, Anna, can you stop with the sniffling?" Johnathan's voice cut through the silence like a blade. "Some of us have important work tomorrow and need to sleep."
"I'm sorry," I whispered, pressing my face into the pillow to silence any sound.
"Just... figure yourself out, okay? This whole sad housewife act is getting old."
I bit down on the pillowcase to keep from making any noise, tasting salt and cotton and the bitter flavor of my own humiliation. In the darkness, I began to notice things I'd been too trusting to see before. The way Johnathan's phone buzzed with messages late into the night. The new cologne that clung to his clothes, something expensive and unfamiliar that definitely wasn't the woody scent I'd given him for Christmas. The way he'd started taking longer showers when he came home, washing away traces of wherever he'd really been.
As my husband's breathing eventually evened into sleep beside me, I stared at the ceiling and felt something shift inside me. Not breaking—not yet—but bending. Stretching. Preparing for whatever truth was coming.
Because deep down, in a place I was only beginning to acknowledge, I was starting to understand that the lipstick hadn't been the beginning of Johnathan's betrayal.
It had been my first glimpse of how far it had already gone.
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