
The Stranger in My Husband's Phone
Chapter 5
The office had that particular emptiness that only exists after 8 PM — the hum of the HVAC system louder than it should be, the overhead lights replaced by the amber glow of individual desk lamps left on by people who always meant to come back. I was the last one on the floor. I knew because I'd heard the elevator ding four times in the hour before, each time taking someone home to their evening, their dinner, their version of a life that didn't include sitting in a half-dark office doing what I was about to do.
I opened Snapchat on my phone. Not Daniel's iPad. My phone, logged into a fresh email address I'd created the week before using a name that was close enough to mine to feel familiar and nothing like it at all.
The profile photo had taken me three days to choose. Not because the options were limited — I'd gone through a licensing site, the kind that sells images by the pack, and there were hundreds of women to pick from. It took three days because I kept gravitating toward faces that looked like versions of me. Warmer. Softer. The kind of face I used to have in photos when I was twenty-four and thought I had all the time in the world to figure out who I was. I kept clicking on them and then stopping myself.
The woman I finally chose had dark curly hair that fell past her shoulders and a smile with a dimple in the left cheek. She was holding a coffee cup in what looked like a cozy, book-lined space. The photo was licensed for commercial use, which felt both practical and deeply strange. I cropped it to a circle and set it as the profile image, and when the app loaded it into place, I just looked at her for a minute. She looked like someone who had made interesting choices. She looked like someone who didn't have a husband.
Username: ivy.reads.
Bio: *bookseller // SF // always recommending something you didn't ask for // Miso is the real owner.*
I had built Ivy's life in a Notes document over the span of a week — the name of the bookstore (Margin Notes, on a side street near the Mission), the cat's name, the neighborhood. The details came easily. That was the part that unsettled me most, sitting here now in the quiet office, the city a faint orange glow through the floor-to-ceiling windows. The ease of it. I hadn't strained for any of it. Ivy had arrived more or less fully formed, the way characters sometimes do when you've been carrying them around without knowing it.
Because she wasn't fiction. Not exactly.
Ivy was me at twenty-six, the year before I met Daniel. I'd been subletting a room in a cramped apartment with two other people, writing freelance copy to pay rent, spending my weekends at used bookstores and farmers' markets and the kind of local shows where the bands were too loud and you had to shout into someone's ear to be heard. I'd been making plans that felt large and unformed and entirely mine. I'd been thinking — genuinely thinking, not just daydreaming — about moving to California. About building something small and specific and exactly what I wanted.
Then I met Daniel at a friend's dinner party, and he had that careful handwriting and that particular way of listening, and I thought: *This is it. This is the thing I've been waiting for instead.*
I didn't move to California. I stayed. The large, unformed plans quietly folded themselves up and found places to sit in the back of closets and under beds, and I told myself I'd get to them later. I always meant later.
Ivy had not made that trade. Ivy had kept going.
I found SugarPeach's account — her real one, public, the kind of account that's all carefully composed brunch photos and gym selfies and quotes in a clean sans-serif font. Her name was Maya. She lived in Atlanta. She was twenty-nine, younger than me by four years, and she had 2,300 followers and an easy, photogenic life and, apparently, my husband.
Her most recent post was a photo of a book — the new Sally Rooney, faceup on a marble countertop beside a candle and a glass of red wine. The caption said *current situation.* The comments were full of people who agreed.
I looked at the photo for a moment. Then I switched to Ivy's account, navigated to the post, and left a comment.
*Ivy:* margin notes has had this one since Tuesday — you would love our copy with the staff note inside the front cover. sometimes books just need a little annotation to arrive properly ✦*
My finger hovered over the post button. I was aware of the quality of the silence around me — the AC, the distant sound of traffic twenty stories below, my own measured breathing. I pressed it.
Then I put my phone face-down on the desk and tried to go back to work.
I didn't go back to work. I sat there with my hands on the keyboard and my eyes on the screen and my thoughts somewhere else entirely, in the specific location of a comment section in Atlanta where a woman named Maya might or might not pick up her phone in the next few hours. I thought about Daniel's handwriting in the Mary Oliver book. *For the woman who taught me how to read silence.* I thought about *she used to be fun*. I thought about *tell me about your day. I actually want to hear it.* The way those words had felt — not like a knife, but like a sound you can't unhear, the kind that changes the acoustics of the room permanently.
I packed up at nine-thirty and took the subway home. Daniel was already asleep, or pretending to be. I stood in the bathroom for a few minutes, the cold water running over my wrists, looking at myself in the mirror the way you do when you're trying to recognize yourself. The woman in the mirror looked fine. She looked composed. Whatever she was doing, she was doing it quietly.
I was almost asleep when I remembered the comment.
I reached for my phone in the dark, tilting the screen away from Daniel's side of the bed, and opened Snapchat. The little ghost icon had a number beside it. One notification.
Not from Maya.
The username was DannyC_88.
My thumb didn't move for a full three seconds.
I tapped it.
*hey, saw your comment on Peach's post. your bookstore sounds amazing.*
The timestamp said 11:52 PM. Ten minutes ago. While I had been lying here in the dark of our bedroom, my breathing carefully slow, my eyes almost closed, he had been next to me with his phone angled away, typing this sentence to a woman who did not exist.
To a woman who was me.
I read the message once. I read it again. The screen glowed softly in the dark between us. His shoulder was close enough that I could have reached over and touched it without even fully extending my arm.
I locked my phone and set it face-down on the nightstand.
I looked at the ceiling. The fan turned slowly in the dark. Somewhere in the city, October was doing what October does — that slow, amber recession, everything looking like the last hour of something.
I thought: *There you are.*
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