After I ch.eated, my husband never laid a hand on me again. For eighteen years, we coexisted like strangers under the same roof—until a routine medical checkup after retirement, when the doctor’s words shattered me right there in the office.

After I ch.eated, my husband never laid a hand on me again. For eighteen years, we coexisted like strangers under the same roof—until a routine medical checkup after retirement, when the doctor’s words shattered me right there in the office.

The word cracked through the air. I turned sharply.

Jake stood about twenty feet away, his face drained of color and tight with a fury that aged him instantly. Beside him was Michael, rigid and silent, like something carved from ice.

My husband’s face was expressionless, but his eyes were razor-sharp. My thoughts vanished. Jake had come home from college to surprise me. When I didn’t answer my phone, he’d convinced Michael to drive him to my “usual places.”

“Home,” Michael said flatly. Then he turned toward the car without checking if I followed.

The ride back felt like a procession to a grave. Jake’s disappointment filled the back seat. Once home, Michael sent him upstairs. Then he sat on the sofa, lit a cigarette—one he had quit years earlier for me—and studied me through the haze.

“How long?” His calm voice terrified me more than shouting would have.

“I’m sorry,” I sobbed, kneeling before him. “I was wrong.”

“I asked how long.”

“Three months,” I whispered. “But it wasn’t physical at first. We just talked.”

Post navigation

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

back to top