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A serious man in a suit | Source: Pexels
“Oh, I’m sorry,” she laughed softly, a sound that held a surprising hint of melancholy. “My manners. I’m just… glad you’re here tonight. It means a lot to him. To have you both.”
The word “both” hung in the air, a tiny, almost imperceptible tremor. It felt… off. I glanced instinctively at my husband, who was still chatting away, his back to us. My heart did a strange little flutter. Both? What did she mean? Was she referring to us as a couple? Or was there another “both”?
The rest of the night, I watched my husband. Did he look at her? Did their paths cross? They didn’t. Not overtly. He was the picture of a devoted partner, introducing me to his colleagues, making sure my glass was full. Yet, every time he smiled at me, a tiny voice whispered, Does he know what she knows?
The drive home was quiet. He talked about a new client, a potential promotion. I feigned interest, my mind replaying the encounter. “Who was that woman?” I asked, trying to sound casual. “The one with the long dark hair, who spoke to me earlier? Said she was glad I was there.”
He frowned, concentration etched on his face from the winding road. “Which one? Oh, you mean… probably just someone from accounting. Or maybe HR. I don’t keep track of everyone, love. You meet hundreds of people at these things.” He dismissed it with a wave of his hand, and the subject was closed.
The next few weeks were a blur of growing paranoia. I found myself scrutinizing his phone, though I never dared to open it. I checked his emails, his browser history – anything for a clue. I was being ridiculous, I chided myself. He loves you. This is just your insecurity talking. But the feeling wouldn’t go away. It escalated, an insidious poison spreading through my mind.
Nothing. Not in his emails. Not in his contacts. See? I thought, a wave of relief washing over me. You’re crazy.
But then, my gaze fell on the desktop. A folder. Labeled innocuously: “Project X.” My gut twisted. He never used code names for work. He was meticulously organized.
With trembling fingers, I clicked. Inside, wasn’t documents or spreadsheets. It was photos.
Dozens of them.
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