
The Night My Husband’s Affair Played on Our TV
Chapter 3
I woke to the sound of Daniel's footsteps in the hallway, deliberately heavy as he passed our bedroom door—no, my bedroom door now. Three days had passed since the projection incident, and each morning brought the same routine: his awkward shuffling outside, hesitation, then retreat. Today, I didn't hold my breath waiting for him to knock. I knew he wouldn't.
The guest room door clicked shut as I stared at the ceiling. The bed felt enormous without him, a desert of Egyptian cotton that I crossed alone each night. I'd removed his pillow, his reading glasses, every trace of him, yet his absence screamed louder than his presence ever had.
When I finally emerged, dressed in a charcoal pencil skirt and silk blouse—armor for the day ahead—a steaming latte waited on the kitchen counter. Daniel's latest pathetic peace offering. I poured it down the sink without tasting it, watching the caramel-colored liquid swirl into oblivion.
We had evolved beyond shouting. The silence between us now carried more weight than any accusation. When we passed in the hallway, his eyes would search mine, desperate for forgiveness I couldn't give. I'd look through him, as if he were already gone.
Last night, he'd left a bouquet of peonies—my favorites—outside the bedroom door. I'd stepped over them, leaving them to wilt on the hardwood floor. This morning, they were gone.
---
The Henderson project presentation was going smoothly until Victoria Hayes cleared her throat, her voice dripping with false concern.
"Perhaps Elena's personal life is affecting her focus on the Henderson project? These renderings seem... distracted."
The conference room fell silent. Ten pairs of eyes turned to me, some curious, others gleefully anticipating my reaction. They all knew. Somehow, they all knew.
"The renderings are exactly as the client requested," I replied, my voice steady despite the heat crawling up my neck. "Unless you have specific technical feedback, Victoria, I suggest we move on."
But the damage was done. As we filed out of the meeting, I caught the whispers:
"Did you hear about her husband?"
"With an intern, apparently..."
"Always the last to know..."
I locked myself in the bathroom stall, pressing my forehead against the cool metal door. My carefully constructed professional persona was crumbling along with my marriage. The humiliation burned worse than the betrayal—to be pitied, to be the subject of office gossip, to be the woman who couldn't keep her husband satisfied.
When I returned to my desk, a text from Daniel waited: *Can we talk tonight?*
I left it unanswered, just like the dozen before it.
---
The rain pounded against my umbrella as I stumbled out of the bar, my third—or was it fourth?—martini blurring the edges of Manhattan's skyline. The sidewalk seemed to tilt beneath my feet, and I laughed bitterly at the metaphor—my entire world had been tilting since that night.
I hadn't meant to drink so much, but each glass had dulled the ache a little more. Each olive I'd speared with the plastic sword had been Daniel's face, Sophie's face, Victoria's face.
My heel caught in a sidewalk grate, and I lurched forward, barely catching myself on a parking meter. Rain soaked through my blouse as my umbrella clattered to the ground. I didn't bother retrieving it. What did it matter? I was already drowning.
Somehow I made it to our building, mascara streaming down my cheeks, hair plastered to my face. The doorman averted his eyes—another person who knew, who pitied me.
As I fumbled with my keys outside our apartment door, it swung open. Daniel stood there, his expression shifting from surprise to concern.
"Elena, you're soaked—" He reached for me, but I recoiled as if his touch would burn.
"Don't," I slurred, pushing past him with such force that I nearly fell. "Don't you dare pretend you still care about me."
"You're drunk," he said, following me into the foyer. "Let me help you—"
"Help me?" I spun around, my laugh verging on hysteria. "You've helped enough. Save your fake concern for someone who believes your lies."
I saw the hurt flash across his face, quickly replaced by guilt—good, let him feel it. Let him drown in it like I was.
"Everyone knows," I whispered, my voice breaking. "At work, they all know what you did. What she did. They look at me like I'm pathetic."
Daniel stepped forward again, his hand outstretched. "Elena, please—"
"No!" I shoved him away with all my strength, my palm connecting with his chest. The force of it sent me stumbling backward until my shoulders hit the wall. "I said don't touch me!"
We stood there, separated by three feet of hardwood floor and an ocean of betrayal, the only sound the rain hammering against our windows and my ragged breathing.
In that moment, staring at the stranger who wore my husband's face, I realized with perfect clarity that some wounds never heal. Some vows, once broken, can never be mended.
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