
The Second She Stopped Waiting
Chapter 1
The marble countertop was ice beneath my fingertips. I gripped the edge until my knuckles turned a skeletal white against the pristine surface.
Behind me, the bathroom's recessed lighting cast everything in a cold, surgical glare—the chrome fixtures, the spotless mirror, and Ryker. He stood there with a towel slung low around his waist, his thumb moving across his phone screen with practiced indifference.
He was scrolling through Threads, completely oblivious to the fact that my world had just tilted off its axis. The blue notification light blinked incessantly, a rhythmic strobe against the white tile.
My eyes dropped to his left wrist. There, where the towel had slipped just enough to reveal the pale skin of his inner forearm, was the mark.
Black ink. Delicate script. A name.
It wasn't mine.
Aria.
I blinked hard, waiting for the hallucination to fade. Steam from his shower still clung to the mirror's edges, framing my reflection in a hazy blur, but the letters remained stark. An accusation in permanent ink.
The taste of copper flooded my mouth. I’d bitten my lip without realizing it, the sharp sting grounding me in a moment that felt impossible. From the Bluetooth speaker, my "Anniversary Weekend" playlist continued to mock me. Sabrina Carpenter’s "Espresso" filled the silence with a bubbly, upbeat irony.
"That’s sweet, I guess," the lyrics crooned. I wanted to laugh at how perfectly wrong it felt.
Three years. Three years of marriage, and I was only seeing this now. My mind began a rapid, cold cataloging of every red flag I’d painted green: the "volatile market" late nights, the Miami Beach hotel receipt he’d dismissed with a CEO’s easy smile, the calculated distance he maintained in public.
I stared at my reflection. I expected tears, or the frantic clawing of heartbreak. Instead, I found a strange, crystalline calm. My eyes looked clearer than they had in years. The fog of devotion was lifting.
"This is what you get for trusting," I whispered to the mirror. My voice was so low it barely registered over the music.
Ryker shifted. The rustle of his towel was a sharp contrast to the silence between us. He was still absorbed in his phone, the blue light painting his features in a sickly, artificial hue. He looked like a stranger.
Maybe he always had been.
"When did you get that tattoo?" I asked. My voice was steady—sharper than I expected.
The scrolling stopped.
Ryker’s eyes lifted from the screen, meeting mine in the glass. The air in the room seemed to vanish. The speaker transitioned to a slower, more melancholy track, as if the universe were providing the soundtrack to my unraveling.
His gaze dropped to his wrist. I watched his reflection, dissecting every micro-expression: the slight tightening of his eyes, the almost imperceptible clench of his jaw.
Four seconds of silence stretched into an eternity. He didn’t deny it. He didn't scramble for a lie. He didn’t even have the decency to look surprised that I’d finally noticed.
"Sloane—" he started, his voice heavy with the weight of a casual confession.
Then, my phone buzzed on the marble. The screen lit up with a Threads DM. The sender’s name turned my blood to slush.
Aria_official.
The preview text flickered: "Did you tell her yet? Tonight we—"
The blue light from the phone mingled with the bathroom’s LEDs, casting an ethereal, underwater glow over the room. This wasn't a ghost from his past. This was a plan for his future. While I was curating playlists and planning dinners, he was planning an exit.
Slowly, deliberately, I reached for the device. My movements were mechanical, stripped of emotion. I picked it up and turned it face-down with a soft, final click.
"I need you to leave," I said, my voice cutting through the room with surgical precision. "Get out !!!!"
Ryker’s reflection stared back, his mouth opening to protest, to gaslight, to lie. I didn't wait to hear it. I reached for the bottom drawer of the vanity cabinet.
Six weeks ago, I’d found that receipt and started a file I wasn't ready to admit I needed. Now, my fingers found the edge of the manila folder hidden beneath the spare towels.
For the first time since I saw that name, I felt something other than numbness.
I felt ready.
The game was about to begin.
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