
Teacher Unveils Husband's Affair
Teacher Unveils Husband's Affair Chapter 1
I kissed Ashton goodbye at our front door, my lips barely grazing his cheek before he pulled away. His eyes never left his phone screen, fingers dancing across the keyboard with an urgency I hadn't seen him show for anything related to me in months.
"Have fun with your teacher stuff," he said, waving me off like I was an annoying interruption to something far more important.
I hefted my suitcase into the trunk of my Honda, the weight of three days' worth of conference materials and clothes nothing compared to the heaviness settling in my chest. As I slammed the trunk shut, I caught sight of him through our living room window. That smirk. The same one he used to give me when we were dating, when he'd text me sweet messages throughout the day. Now it was directed at his phone, at someone else's words.
"Bye bye, Meadow!" My parrot's cheerful squawk drifted from the open window, the phrase I'd taught him years ago when Ashton and I were still happy.
I forced a smile and waved at the window, even though I knew Charlie couldn't see me from his perch. At least someone in this house would miss me.
The three-hour drive to the conference gave me too much time to think. Every mile marker that passed seemed to echo the growing distance I felt from my husband. When had his kisses become obligatory? When had his eyes stopped lighting up when I walked into a room?
The teaching conference buzzed with the familiar energy of educators passionate about their craft. I threw myself into workshops about innovative classroom techniques and student engagement strategies, trying to lose myself in the world where I felt competent, valued. Where I mattered.
But even surrounded by colleagues who respected my opinions and sought my advice, I couldn't shake the image of Ashton's smirk. By the second evening, the anxiety had grown into a gnawing beast in my stomach.
I called him from my hotel room at eight PM. Voicemail.
At nine PM. Voicemail again.
"Hey, it's me," I said after the beep, trying to keep my voice light. "Just wanted to hear your voice. I left that casserole in the fridge – the one with the chicken and rice you like. There's also leftover soup from Sunday. Don't forget to eat something other than takeout, okay? I love you."
At ten PM, I tried once more. This time I didn't leave a message.
Finally, at eleven-fifteen, my phone buzzed with a text: "Busy with work. Stop calling."
Four words. Four cold, dismissive words that felt like a slap across the face.
I stared at the message until the screen went dark, then stared at my own reflection in the black mirror of my phone. When had I become the kind of wife who was told to "stop calling"? When had caring about my husband's well-being become an annoyance?
I barely slept that night, tossing between scratchy hotel sheets, remembering how Ashton used to call me during business trips just to hear my voice before bed. How he'd stay on the phone for hours, talking about everything and nothing. That man felt like a stranger now, someone I'd invented in my desperate need to believe my marriage was still alive.
The next morning, I made a decision that surprised even me. I packed my bags, checked out early, and drove home. The conference organizers understood – family emergency, I told them. It wasn't exactly a lie.
The house was eerily quiet when I unlocked the front door. My heels clicked against the hardwood as I set my suitcase down in the entryway, the sound echoing in the silence. Even Charlie was quiet in his cage across the living room.
"Hey, baby," I called softly to my parrot as I approached his cage. "Did you miss me?"
Charlie tilted his head, fixing me with one bright eye. Then, in a voice that made my blood freeze, he spoke:
"Oh Ashton, you're so much better than your boring wife."
The voice was breathy, feminine, dripping with seduction. It wasn't mine.
My hands gripped the back of the sofa as Charlie continued, his voice dropping to mimic Ashton's deeper tones: "She's barren anyway. You're the woman I should have married."
Then back to that sultry feminine voice: "When will you divorce that pathetic teacher?"
The room spun around me. Charlie bobbed his head proudly, pleased with his performance, repeating fragments like a broken record: "Boring wife... barren... pathetic teacher... divorce her..."
I sank onto the sofa, my legs unable to support me anymore. Seven years of marriage. Seven years of enduring his family's cruel comments about my inability to give them grandchildren. Seven years of believing their whispered accusations that I was the problem, that I was broken, that I wasn't enough.
And now I knew the truth. While I was away trying to better myself professionally, trying to be the wife he could be proud of, he was here. With her. Planning my disposal like I was nothing more than an inconvenient obstacle to his happiness.
Charlie squawked again: "Boring wife... boring wife..."
I laughed, a sharp, bitter sound that scared even me. My faithful parrot, my only loyal companion in this house, had just handed me the truth on a silver platter.
Teacher Unveils Husband's Affair of Contents
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