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The Stranger in My Husband's Phone Novel Cover

The Stranger in My Husband's Phone

Seven months into my marriage, Daniel told me he "couldn't get it up anymore." Two weeks later, I found his secret Snapchat—and the woman he was begging for. So I became her. I built "Ivy" from scratch: a bookstore owner in San Francisco, a cat named Miso, a laugh he'd never heard. I sent him photos that weren't mine. I said things his wife had been too tired to say. And he fell. God, he fell hard. He told Ivy he felt trapped. He told Ivy his wife had "lost her spark." He quoted her a poem—from a book he once gave me. Tonight he's driving thirty minutes to meet Ivy at a hotel. He thinks he's going to cheat on his wife. He doesn't know his wife is already in Room 412. And she brought the divorce papers.
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Chapter 2

The apartment was quiet in the way it only gets on weekday mornings after Daniel leaves — a specific, settled kind of quiet, like the rooms have exhaled.

I made coffee. I opened my laptop. I told myself I was going to work.

My freelance deadline was Friday, and I needed a reference book I'd used last year — something on narrative structure that I was almost certain was on the third shelf, left side, behind the row of Daniel's architecture theory books that he never actually read anymore. I crossed the living room in my socks, coffee mug in hand, and started scanning spines.

That's when my fingers found it.

Not the book I was looking for. A slim, pale green volume wedged between two larger ones, slightly tilted, like it had been replaced in a hurry or just never quite fit. Mary Oliver. I knew the cover before I even pulled it out — I'd seen it on the shelf for years without really seeing it, the way you stop seeing things that have always been there.

I pulled it out.

The spine cracked faintly when I opened it, the way old paperbacks do when they haven't been opened in a while. I turned to the first page out of reflex, the way you do with any book, expecting nothing.

Daniel's handwriting was on the inside cover.

His actual handwriting — not the cramped shorthand he uses for grocery lists, but the careful, deliberate version he only uses when something matters. Blue ink, slightly faded. Five years ago, based on the date in the corner.

*For the woman who taught me how to read silence.*

I stood there for a moment with the book open in both hands.

Then I sat down on the floor. Right there, in front of the bookshelf, my back against the edge of the couch. I don't know exactly why. My legs just made the decision before I did.

I read the whole thing.

Mary Oliver is not a long read, but I took my time. I read poems I'd never read before and a few I half-remembered from college. The coffee went cold beside me. The morning light shifted across the floor in the way it does in October, that low, amber slant that makes everything look like it's already being remembered.

When I closed the book, I just sat there for a minute with it in my lap.

For the woman who taught me how to read silence.

I tried to think of the last time Daniel had said something like that to me. Not a grand gesture — I wasn't looking for grand. Just a sentence with more than four words in it. A sentence that meant he had been paying attention to something specific about me, something that required actual thought.

I couldn't find it.

What I could find, if I was being honest with myself, was a long, unbroken string of *yeah* and *sure* and *I'm tired* and *later*. The conversational equivalent of a screen saver — present, technically, but not really running anything.

I'm not sad. That's the thing I kept coming back to, sitting there on the floor with the Mary Oliver in my lap. I should be sad and I'm not. I'm just... taking inventory. Like when you open the fridge and realize the milk went bad last week and you didn't notice, and you're not upset exactly, you're just standing there thinking, *huh. When did that happen.*

The inscription was five years ago. We'd been dating for maybe three months. He wrote things like that then. He noticed things like that then — the specific way I went quiet when I was thinking hard, the way I'd rather sit with a feeling than talk it to death. He had seen that about me and thought it was worth writing down.

I wondered when I had stopped being someone he wrote things down about.

I wondered, and then I stopped wondering, because that particular line of thinking doesn't go anywhere useful.

I stood up. Smoothed out my sweatpants. Put the book back on the shelf.

I placed it back in the same gap between the same two books, but when I let go, I could see it was sitting about a centimeter to the right of where it had been. I noticed that. I didn't fix it.

Back at the kitchen table, I opened my laptop and tried to work. I managed about forty minutes — real work, focused, the kind where you look up and time has passed. Then I needed a recipe. We were out of the good olive oil and I wanted to know if I could substitute something, and my phone was charging in the bedroom, and Daniel's iPad was right there on the coffee table where he'd left it that morning.

I picked it up. Tapped the screen.

The notification appeared before the lock screen even fully loaded — a white ghost on a yellow background, the Snapchat icon, a username I didn't recognize. Something with numbers at the end. The kind of username that looks like it was made to be hard to search.

The preview text sat there in the banner, half a sentence, cut off by the edge of the notification:

*can u send me another one of—*

The screen went dark.

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