
Why My Husband Refused to Have Sex with Me
Chapter 2
The first time I tried to seduce Michael after weeks of cold silence, I planned everything with careful precision, like a woman prepping for a battle she knows she’s already lost. I waited until evening, the city’s bruised blue twilight pressing against our windows, then slipped into the silk nightgown he used to love—the pale lavender one, soft as a sigh. I lit candles on the dresser, their flames flickering shadows across the room, scenting the air with vanilla and faint hope.
He came in late, the apartment door slamming behind him, dropping his bag with a dull thud. I heard his heavy steps pause outside our bedroom and forced myself to smile, smoothing my hair, arranging myself on the edge of the bed. The candles threw golden stripes across the sheets, and I felt exposed, my heart thudding against my ribs.
When he entered, the sharp tang of city air clung to him, mingled with something unfamiliar—sour sweat, a trace of cheap cologne. He stopped, eyes darting over me with a flicker of recognition that soured in an instant. I reached for his hand, trying not to sound desperate. “I missed you. I thought…maybe tonight we could—”
His face twisted, disgust pinching the corners of his mouth. He jerked his hand away as if my touch burned. “Emily, I’m too exhausted for this nonsense. Can’t you see I’m tired?” His voice was rough, final, slicing through my hope.
I shrank back, the silk suddenly cold against my skin. “I just—”
He cut me off, voice rising. “Stop bothering me. Jesus.” He turned his back, yanking off his shirt and tossing it to the floor with careless force, the muscles in his shoulders taut. He crawled into bed, pulling the sheets up like a barricade, leaving me stranded on the other side in the flickering candlelight.
For a moment I sat there, silent, watching his back rise and fall in shallow breaths. Each one seemed to push me further away, until the space between us was a chasm filled with all the things we weren’t saying. The candles burned down to stubs, their light fading as I finally slipped out of the room, the silk nightgown clinging to my legs like a second skin.
After that night, I started watching him with new eyes—every movement, every word cataloged and weighed. I noticed his phone lit up at odd hours, the screen casting a ghostly glow across his face as he read messages in silence. Whenever the buzz came, he’d stiffen, eyes narrowing, then reach for his jacket with mechanical urgency.
It became a pattern: a message, a muttered excuse, a rushed exit. "Client dinner," he'd toss over his shoulder, or "Drinks with the team." Sometimes, "Late project meeting." The explanations blurred together, each thinner than the last. I kept mental notes, each one pricking at my nerves like thorns.
It was never the same story twice, but the rhythm was identical. He’d leave at dusk or after dinner, always glancing at me with that strange mix of irritation and guilt, as if daring me to question him. I learned to recognize the signs—the restless tapping of his foot, the tight grip on his phone, the way he avoided my gaze as he headed for the door.
He came home later and later, sometimes long past midnight. When he returned, he was flushed and oddly cheerful, a far cry from the man who snapped at me in the bedroom. I watched him undress with a practiced detachment, searching for clues in the way he moved, the scents that clung to him, the odd absence of hunger or fatigue.
I tried again, once, to bridge the distance, brushing my fingers along his arm as he stood in the bathroom, steam curling around us, making everything hazy and intimate. He flinched, pulling away so quickly I nearly lost my balance. “Seriously, Emily. Not tonight.” His tone was ice, dismissive, and I felt a stab of shame so sharp I nearly gasped.
Nights became a silent war zone, our apartment echoing with the things we didn’t say. I watched him slip out the door, watched the light go out in his eyes whenever I reached for him, watched the fruit disappear from the bowl, the olive oil untouched and mocking. I felt myself shrinking, every rejection carving a hollow inside me that I tried to fill with busywork, phone calls to Sarah, long walks alone in Prospect Park.
But the suspicion festered, growing stronger with each vague excuse, each slammed door. I started imagining him with another woman—someone younger, prettier, less worn down by years of disappointment. The image haunted me, fueling a bitter resolve.
And then came the night I couldn’t take it anymore. He left after dinner, muttering something about a team celebration, but I saw the way his hands shook as he grabbed the bag of fruit, the way his eyes darted toward his phone every few seconds. I watched from our window as he disappeared into the street, swallowed by the city’s neon haze.
My heart hammered as I slipped on my coat, locking the door behind me. I wasn’t going to wait any longer. If he was hiding something, I’d find it, even if it destroyed me.
Outside, the air was thick with the promise of rain and secrets. I followed in his footsteps, letting my anger guide me through the slick streets, the city lights blurring as I walked faster. I knew where he was going. I had to know what waited for him in the night—and what that meant for the woman left behind in the dark.
Somewhere ahead, a truth was waiting, and I was done pretending I couldn’t see it.
You may also like





