
Chapter 1 of The Husband Who Chose Wrong
The rain drummed against our apartment windows as I adjusted the candlelight for the third time, my hands trembling slightly with anticipation. Five years. Five years since Damien had knelt in the rain outside this very building, his dark hair plastered to his forehead, ring box shaking in his hands as he declared I was his entire world.
"Emma," he had whispered that night, rain streaming down his face like tears of joy, "you're everything I never knew I needed. Say you'll be mine forever."
Forever. The word had tasted like honey then, sweet and full of promise.
Now, as I lit the last candle on our anniversary table, I could almost hear the echo of his voice, feel the phantom touch of his lips against mine when I'd said yes. The memory wrapped around me like a warm blanket, pushing away the small voice that had been whispering doubts lately—the late nights, the distant looks, the way he sometimes flinched when I touched him.
I smoothed down my red dress, the one he'd bought me for our first anniversary, and checked my reflection in the hallway mirror. Tonight would be perfect. Tonight would remind us both why we'd fallen so desperately in love.
The small velvet box hidden in my purse seemed to pulse with its own heartbeat. Custom platinum cufflinks, engraved with "Forever Yours" in elegant script. I'd spent weeks designing them, remembering how he always fussed with his shirt cuffs during important meetings. Such a small gesture, but one that said everything I couldn't always find words for.
My phone buzzed—a text from my boss confirming I could leave early. Perfect timing. I grabbed my keys and purse, practically floating out of the office. The surprise would be flawless: dinner ready when he walked through the door, wine breathing, his favorite playlist humming softly in the background.
The elevator ride to our floor felt eternal, my excitement building with each floor we climbed. I fumbled with the lock, eager to transform our living room into something magical, when I heard it—the soft chime of a phone notification from inside.
Strange. Damien should still be at the office.
I pushed open the door, calling out tentatively, "Damien? Are you home early too?"
Silence.
The living room was empty, but there on the cream-colored sofa lay his phone, screen glowing like a beacon in the dim afternoon light. He must have forgotten it in his rush to work. I approached it with the intention of calling him, letting him know I'd found it, when the screen lit up again.
A message notification.
From Sophia.
My heart did a small skip. Sophia, his cousin—the one who'd been calling more frequently lately, the one whose name made him smile in that secretive way that used to be reserved only for me.
The preview text made my blood turn to ice water:
"Baby, I'm already wearing the lingerie you bought. Can't wait for tonight at the hotel."
The phone slipped from my nerveless fingers, clattering onto the coffee table. The sound echoed through the apartment like a gunshot.
Baby.
Lingerie.
Hotel.
My knees gave out, and I sank onto the sofa, staring at the glowing screen as if it were a venomous snake. This couldn't be real. This had to be some mistake, some misunderstanding. Sophia was his cousin. Family. There had to be an explanation.
With trembling fingers, I picked up the phone again. I knew his passcode—our anniversary date. He'd never hidden it from me. Why would he? We were married. We trusted each other.
Didn't we?
The messaging app opened, and I scrolled upward through their conversation, each message driving the knife deeper into my chest.
"Missing you already, gorgeous."
"Can't stop thinking about last night."
"You're incredible, Soph. Don't know how I got so lucky."
My vision blurred as I continued scrolling, each endearment a fresh wound. The timestamps showed messages sent during his supposed business trips, during late nights when he claimed to be working on important projects.
Then I found it—the conversation from three months ago. The week I'd lost our baby.
I'd been in the hospital, recovering from the miscarriage that had shattered both our hearts—or so I'd thought. Damien had held my hand, tears streaming down his face as he promised we'd get through it together. He'd said he needed to throw himself into work to cope, that the distraction was the only thing keeping him sane.
But the messages told a different story.
"Wish I could be with you instead of dealing with all this drama at home."
"Emma's being so clingy since the miscarriage. I just need space to breathe."
"Booked us that suite in Cabo. Need to get away from all this."
The phone screen blurred as tears spilled down my cheeks. While I'd been grieving the loss of our child, drowning in hormones and heartbreak, he'd been planning romantic getaways with another woman. While I'd lain in that sterile hospital bed, wondering if our marriage could survive the loss, he'd been telling his lover that I was drama, that I was clingy.
That I was the problem.
I scrolled further back, my heart breaking with each revelation. The affair had been going on for over a year. A full year of lies, of stolen moments, of him coming home to me with her perfume still clinging to his clothes.
How had I been so blind?
The velvet box in my purse felt like it weighed a thousand pounds. "Forever Yours," the cufflinks proclaimed. What a joke. What a beautiful, devastating joke.
I set the phone down carefully, as if it might explode, and looked around our living room—our sanctuary, our home, our life together. The candles I'd lit earlier flickered mockingly, casting dancing shadows on the walls. The wine I'd opened to celebrate our love sat breathing, waiting for a toast that would never come.
Everything looked exactly the same, but everything had changed. The photos on the mantle—our wedding day, our honeymoon, last Christmas morning—they all felt like evidence of a crime now. Evidence of how thoroughly I'd been deceived.
I pulled the velvet box from my purse with numb fingers, staring at the inscription I'd been so proud of. Forever Yours. The irony was almost funny. Almost.
The apartment door would open soon, and Damien would walk through it with that smile that used to make my heart race. He'd kiss my forehead, ask about my day, compliment the dinner I'd prepared. And I'd have to decide—did I confront him now, or did I sit through one more perfect lie?
Outside, the rain continued to fall, just like it had the night he'd proposed. But this time, it sounded like weeping.
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