He Gave His Wife One Day To Accept The Other Woman. Then The Text Arrived-hothiyenvy_5

The night Trevor gave me twenty-four hours to accept his mistress, he did not raise his voice.

That was the part that stayed with me later.

Not the confession.

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Not even the name.

It was how reasonable he sounded while he sat across from me at our dining room table and tried to turn betrayal into a conversation about maturity.

The dishwasher hummed behind me.

The ceiling fan clicked every few seconds, a dry little sound that seemed louder every time the room went quiet.

On the counter, the lemon cleaner I had used after dinner still smelled sharp and clean, like I had scrubbed the kitchen for a husband who was already rehearsing how to keep me and another woman under the same roof of his life.

Trevor wore the navy shirt I had bought him for his birthday.

His wedding ring was still on his finger.

Another woman’s name was in his mouth.

“Gabrielle is part of my life now,” he said.

For a second, I thought I had misheard him.

That is what people say when the truth is too ugly to fit inside the first breath.

You think maybe the dishwasher swallowed a word.

Maybe the ceiling fan clipped the sentence in half.

Maybe the man you married did not just sit in the chair where he ate your pot roast, paid bills with you, opened Christmas cards with you, and tell you that his mistress now had a permanent seat in your marriage.

“What did you just say?” I asked.

Trevor leaned back like he had expected the question.

“I’m not leaving you, Simone,” he said. “I’m being honest. I care about you. But Gabrielle understands a side of me that you don’t.”

He looked almost relieved.

That was when I knew this was not a confession he had stumbled into.

This was a proposal.

Not romantic.

Not honest.

A proposal in the cruelest business sense of the word.

Terms had been drafted without me.

All he wanted now was my signature.

“So you’re cheating on me,” I said.

“It’s not that simple.”

“It is exactly that simple.”

His eyes tightened.

“Don’t make this ugly.”

I laughed once.

I did not mean to.

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