
Wife Uncovers Husband's Affair with Intern
Chapter 1
The soft glow of my laptop screen illuminated the kitchen table as I scrolled through anniversary gift options, a cup of chamomile tea growing cold beside me. Ten years of marriage deserved something special—something that would remind William of all we'd built together. The company, our home, the quiet contentment I'd always believed we shared.
I clicked on William's browser history to find that jewelry store he'd mentioned liking, thinking perhaps I could surprise him with cufflinks from there. But as the page loaded, my fingers froze over the trackpad.
His profile picture stared back at me from the corner of the screen—William in a navy blazer, standing against a backdrop of cherry blossoms, his smile relaxed and genuine. It was a beautiful photo, one I'd never seen before. My heart did a small flip of pleasure until I noticed the timestamp. Last Tuesday. The day he'd claimed to be working late on quarterly reports, coming home after midnight with exhaustion etched into every line of his face.
I minimized the browser and opened his social media account, my pulse quickening. There it was again—the same photo, uploaded three days ago. The location tag read Riverside Park, a place we hadn't visited together in years.
My hands trembled slightly as I scrolled through his recent activity. Then I saw it. Bianca Murray's profile picture. The same cherry blossoms. The same golden afternoon light. The same angle, as if they'd been standing side by side when the photos were taken.
The tea cup slipped from my suddenly nerveless fingers, clattering against the saucer. I stared at the two matching images—my husband and his young intern, both glowing with the same soft happiness, captured in what was clearly the same moment, the same place, the same lie.
Bianca. Twenty-four years old, fresh out of graduate school, with doe eyes and an eagerness that had charmed everyone at the company picnic last month. I remembered William mentioning how dedicated she was, how she stayed late to learn the business, how impressed he was with her initiative. I'd been proud of him for mentoring someone so enthusiastic.
Now those innocent observations took on a different weight. The late nights. The phone calls he took in the other room. The way he'd started showering immediately when he came home, claiming the office air conditioning made him feel sticky.
I clicked back to William's profile, studying the photo with forensic intensity. His expression was unguarded in a way I hadn't seen in months—maybe years. When was the last time he'd looked at me with that kind of unfiltered joy?
The front door opened with its familiar creak, and William's voice carried through the hallway. "Treasure? I'm home."
I slammed the laptop shut, my heart hammering against my ribs. The cheerful domesticity of the moment felt surreal—him calling out like any other evening, me sitting at our kitchen table like any other night, while the evidence of his deception glowed behind the closed screen.
"In here," I managed, surprised by how normal my voice sounded.
He appeared in the doorway, loosening his tie with practiced efficiency. His hair was slightly mussed, and there was a faint flush to his cheeks that could have been from the spring evening or something else entirely.
"Working late again?" I asked, the question carrying more weight than it ever had before.
"You know how it is during quarter-end." He moved to the refrigerator, his back to me as he pulled out a beer. "Everyone's scrambling to close deals, finalize reports. Bianca stayed to help with the client presentations—that girl's got real dedication."
There it was. Her name, dropped so casually into our conversation, like a stone into still water. I watched the ripples spread through my chest, each one carrying a new realization.
"That's nice of her," I said carefully. "It's good that you have such committed employees."
He turned then, beer in hand, and for a moment our eyes met across the kitchen. Something flickered in his expression—guilt, maybe, or recognition of the careful neutrality in my tone. But then he smiled, the same smile I'd fallen in love with fifteen years ago, and kissed my forehead.
"What were you working on?" He nodded toward the laptop.
"Anniversary planning," I said, and watched him freeze for just a heartbeat too long.
"Right. Our anniversary." He recovered quickly, but I caught it—that microsecond of panic, as if he'd forgotten entirely. "I can't wait to see what you've planned."
As he headed upstairs for his shower, I sat in the gathering darkness of our kitchen, the laptop between my hands like a sealed envelope containing truths I wasn't sure I was ready to open. But the matching photos burned behind my eyelids, and I knew there was no unknowing what I'd already seen.
The sound of running water echoed from upstairs, and I realized that for the first time in ten years, I was planning an anniversary celebration while wondering if my marriage was already over.
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