
Wife Exposes Husband's Betrayal
Chapter 1
The anniversary dinner had been perfect—or so I'd thought. Cooper had chosen my favorite restaurant, ordered the wine I loved, and even remembered to compliment the dress I'd spent weeks picking out. We'd laughed over shared memories, his hand covering mine across the candlelit table, and for a moment, everything felt like it used to when we were eighteen and invincible.
Now, standing in our kitchen with my phone in my trembling hands, that perfect evening felt like a cruel joke.
"Just share the photos," I whispered to myself, trying to steady my breathing. "Simple. Normal. What married couples do."
I opened AirDrop, expecting to see "Cooper's iPhone" appear in the list of nearby devices like it had countless times before. Instead, a name I'd never seen stared back at me: "Sunshine."
My wedding ring caught the morning light as I twisted it around my finger—once, twice, three times. The familiar weight of it suddenly felt foreign, like it belonged to someone else's life.
"Sunshine?" The word tasted bitter on my tongue.
Cooper had never called me that. In all our years together—through high school sweethearts, college long-distance, the early struggles of his business, even through the devastating loss of our baby—he'd never once used that pet name. I was always "Luna," sometimes "sweetheart" when he was feeling particularly tender, but never "Sunshine."
I stared at the screen until my eyes burned, willing the name to change back, to reveal itself as some technical glitch or my own tired imagination. But it remained stubbornly, mockingly present: "Sunshine."
The photos from last night—our smiling faces, his arm around my waist, the anniversary cake we'd shared—suddenly felt like evidence of a lie I'd been living without knowing it.
My hands shook as I navigated to Cooper's social media accounts, something I'd never felt the need to do before. Why would I? I trusted him completely. We shared everything, didn't we?
Apparently not everything.
The friend request notification sat at the top of my own social media feed like a poison dart aimed directly at my heart. Someone named "Moonlight" wanted to connect with me. The profile picture showed only a silhouette—a woman's figure against a sunset, deliberately mysterious, calculatedly alluring.
Moonlight and Sunshine.
The cosmic poetry of it made me sick.
I clicked on the profile with fingers that no longer felt like my own. The account was sparse, clearly new, but what little was there told a story I didn't want to understand. Photos of expensive restaurants I'd never been to. Wine glasses raised in toasts I wasn't part of. A delicate hand—not mine—wearing jewelry that looked far too expensive for someone who kept their identity hidden.
And then I saw it: a photo of Cooper's watch. The vintage Rolex I'd saved for months to buy him for his thirtieth birthday. It was lying on what was clearly a hotel nightstand, next to a woman's earrings I'd never seen before.
The kitchen tilted around me. I gripped the marble countertop, the same countertop where Cooper had kissed me just this morning before leaving for work, where he'd promised to bring home my favorite takeout for dinner.
"Mrs. Watkins?"
I spun around, my phone clattering to the floor. A woman stood in my doorway—my doorway, in my home—as if she had every right to be there. She was young, maybe mid-twenties, with dark hair that caught the light the same way mine used to before stress started threading it with premature silver. She was beautiful in a way that felt like looking into a funhouse mirror of my younger self.
"How did you—" I started, but she cut me off with a smile that was all sharp edges.
"The gate was open. Your housekeeper let me in." She stepped into my kitchen with the confidence of someone who belonged there, her heels clicking against the tiles I'd spent hours choosing when we renovated. "I'm Veronica Torres. I think it's time we talked."
She moved closer, and I caught her perfume—something expensive and cloying that made my stomach turn. "You see, Mrs. Watkins, there's been a misunderstanding. Cooper and I are together now, and frankly, this whole charade has gone on long enough."
The words hit me like physical blows, but I forced myself to remain standing, to keep my voice steady. "I'm sorry, who are you exactly?"
Veronica's laugh was like breaking glass. "I'm the woman your husband loves. The woman he calls 'Sunshine.' And you, darling," she gestured around my kitchen, my home, my life, "you're in my way."
She reached into her purse and pulled out a business card, placing it on my counter with deliberate precision. "My lawyer's information. I suggest you call him soon. Cooper wants a divorce, and honestly, it would be so much easier if you just... stepped aside gracefully."
The audacity of it stole my breath. This stranger, this interloper, standing in my kitchen, demanding I give up my marriage, my life, my identity as if it were a coat she could simply try on.
"Get out." The words came from somewhere deep inside me, somewhere I'd forgotten existed.
Veronica tilted her head, studying me like I was an interesting specimen. "I know this is hard to accept, but Cooper doesn't love you anymore. He hasn't for a long time. Why do you think he turned to me?"
She moved toward the door, then paused, looking back with mock sympathy. "Oh, and Luna? You should probably change your AirDrop name too. 'Moonlight' has such a nice ring to it, don't you think?"
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