Her Husband Faked Toronto. His Secret Gurugram Lease Exposed Everything-eirian

The morning I took James to Indira Gandhi International Airport, I knew my marriage was already over.

I still cried when he hugged me at the departure gate.

That was the part that would have looked convincing to anyone watching.

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A wife standing under cold glass doors in New Delhi, holding her husband’s hand before he left for what he called a two-year assignment in Toronto.

A husband in a folded winter coat, passport in hand, whispering that everything he was doing was for us.

A public goodbye.

A private funeral.

The air smelled like burnt coffee, jet fuel, and perfume sprayed too heavily by women trying not to fall apart in public.

A boarding announcement cracked over the speakers, turning names and gate numbers into static.

James squeezed my fingers like a man who thought tenderness could still pass as truth.

I let him.

From the outside, our life in Delhi looked like something solid.

We lived in a large house in Vasant Vihar with marble floors, cream curtains, and a dining table big enough for people who planned a future as if the future owed them obedience.

On weekends, we had breakfast in Khan Market.

Some evenings we drove past India Gate at sunset, when the city looked gold for ten minutes and everything ugly softened under the light.

We had properties in Gurugram and Mumbai.

We had investments.

We had conversations about expansion, tax planning, renovations, and someday maybe building something with our name on it.

But money can make a marriage look stronger than it is.

It gives betrayal better furniture.

James was disciplined in public.

He was polished at dinners, charming with bankers, patient with waiters, and careful with the kind of details that make people call a man dependable.

He never forgot birthdays.

He remembered how I took my tea.

He knew when to touch the small of my back in a room full of people so I looked loved.

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