
Unmasking the Cheating Husband
Chapter 3
I couldn't sleep. Every time I closed my eyes, I heard that voice again—*When darkness falls, I'm not afraid. Paxton moves forward, with mama behind him.* The lullaby I'd never shared with anyone, sung back to me by a stranger who somehow knew my deepest secret.
The phone sat on my nightstand like a loaded weapon. I'd checked it seventeen times since the call ended, hoping for another message, another clue. Who was Prosecutor Elliott? How did he know about Carson's violence before it happened? And how—how—did he know my song?
At 3 AM, the phone rang again.
"Ms. Jacobs?" The same authoritative voice, warm yet urgent.
"Elliott?" I whispered, glancing toward the bedroom door where Carson slept—or pretended to sleep.
"I know you have questions. I wish I could explain everything, but right now, you need to focus on protecting yourself and Paxton. Carson isn't just having an affair—he's been embezzling from his company for months."
My breath caught. "That's impossible. Carson would never—"
"Check his home office. Behind the filing cabinet, there's a loose floorboard. You'll find financial documents and a second phone. The phone contains communications with Angel about moving money offshore. They're planning to disappear together, but first, Carson needs to discredit you."
The certainty in his voice chilled me. "Why would he need to discredit me?"
"Because you're the only witness to his behavior. If you try to leave or expose the affair, he'll claim you're mentally unstable. He's already been laying groundwork—telling colleagues you've been acting erratic, paranoid. The physical violence tonight was a test to see how far he could push you."
Tears burned my eyes. Everything Elliott described aligned with Carson's recent behavior—the subtle comments about my "emotional state," the way he'd started questioning my memory of conversations.
"Tomorrow night, he's planning to escalate," Elliott continued. "He'll provoke another confrontation, this time in front of witnesses. Your neighbors, maybe your parents. He wants documentation of you being 'hysterical.'"
"How do you know all this?" The question tore from my throat.
"Because I've seen what happens when good people don't get the warnings they deserve. Check the office, Myra. Then get Paxton somewhere safe."
The line went dead, leaving me shaking in the darkness.
---
The next morning, Carson left for work whistling—actually whistling—as if he hadn't threatened me twelve hours earlier. I waited until his car disappeared around the corner before creeping into his home office with Paxton on my hip.
The filing cabinet stood against the far wall, heavy and imposing. I set Paxton in his playpen and knelt beside it, running my fingers along the baseboards until I felt it—a slight give in the floorboard.
My hands trembled as I pried it loose. Inside was a manila envelope thick with documents and a sleek black phone I'd never seen before.
The financial papers made my stomach lurch. Bank statements showing systematic transfers from Carson's company accounts to personal offshore holdings. Invoices for services that didn't exist. A paper trail of theft stretching back eight months.
The phone was worse. Message after message between Carson and Angel, discussing their "exit strategy." Plans to liquidate assets and disappear to Costa Rica. And scattered throughout, casual discussions about "handling the Myra problem."
*She's getting suspicious. Might need to accelerate timeline.*
*Can you get her committed? Temporary psychiatric hold?*
*Working on it. Few more episodes like last night should do it.*
I sank to the floor, the phone slipping from my numb fingers. They weren't just having an affair—they were planning to destroy my life and steal my son.
Paxton babbled from his playpen, reaching for me with trusting eyes. In that moment, something fundamental shifted inside me. The scared, passive woman who'd accepted Carson's cruelty died, replaced by something fierce and protective.
I photographed every document, every message. Then I carefully replaced everything exactly as I'd found it. Carson would never suspect his perfect victim had finally learned to fight back.
---
That afternoon, I packed with military precision. A bag for Paxton with diapers, clothes, his favorite stuffed elephant. A bag for myself with essentials and the printed evidence hidden in a diaper box. I moved through our house like a ghost, erasing traces of our presence while Carson remained oblivious at work.
The note I left was simple: *Need time to think. Don't follow us.*
My parents' house sat twenty minutes away, a modest ranch where I'd grown up believing in fairy tales and happy endings. Mom opened the door before I could knock, as if she'd been watching for me.
"Oh, sweetheart," she whispered, pulling me into her arms. "We've been so worried."
Dad appeared behind her, his weathered face grim with understanding. "Carson?"
I nodded, unable to speak past the lump in my throat.
"About damn time," he muttered, taking Paxton from my arms. "This little guy's been missing his grandpa."
As they fussed over Paxton and settled us into my old bedroom, I felt something I'd forgotten existed—safety. For the first time in months, I could breathe without calculating Carson's mood or measuring my words.
But I knew this peace was temporary. Carson would come. And when he did, I'd be ready.
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