
Chapter 1 of Wife Exposes Husband's Fraud
I hummed softly to myself as I squirted bathroom cleaner around the shower tiles, the familiar routine soothing after a long day at work. Marcus had left for his therapy appointment an hour ago, another in the endless series of treatments for his condition. Three years of marriage, three years of supporting him through his erectile dysfunction, three years of writing checks and offering endless encouragement. Three years without intimacy.
The bathroom light flickered slightly as I worked the scrub brush in circles, my mind wandering to the bank statement I'd reviewed earlier. Another five thousand dollars transferred to the specialist Marcus had found. I pushed away the tiny voice questioning why nothing ever seemed to improve despite all the money we'd spent.
"It's for us," I whispered to myself, the mantra I'd repeated countless times. "For our future together."
I moved to the shower drain, noticing the water had been pooling again. With a sigh, I pulled on a rubber glove and reached into the drain, feeling for whatever hair or soap scum might be causing the clog. My fingers touched something rubbery and unfamiliar.
"What in the world?" I muttered, carefully extracting the object.
Time stopped. The bathroom seemed to tilt around me as I stared at what lay in my gloved palm. A used condom, tied at the end, unmistakable.
My heart slammed against my ribs so hard I could hear the blood rushing in my ears. I couldn't breathe. Couldn't think. The implications crashed through my mind like a wrecking ball, destroying everything I thought I knew about my marriage.
"This isn't possible," I whispered, my voice sounding strange and distant to my own ears.
But it was. The evidence lay in my trembling hand. The husband who couldn't perform sexually with me had been performing with someone else. In our shower. In our home.
I staggered back against the counter, nearly slipping on the wet tile. My reflection caught my eye—pale face, wide eyes, the perfect picture of a woman whose world had just imploded. Three years of sexless marriage. Three years of writing checks for treatments. Over one hundred thousand dollars gone.
A cold clarity washed over me, replacing the initial shock. With mechanical precision, I reached under the sink for a ziplock bag. I carefully deposited the condom inside, sealed it, and with a steady hand, wrote the date and time on the plastic with a permanent marker. Evidence. I would need evidence.
I tucked the bag behind the cleaning supplies where Marcus would never look. My mind was already racing ahead, calculating, planning. If he'd lied about this—what else had he lied about? The money? The treatments? Everything?
The bathroom door seemed miles away as I walked out, my legs somehow supporting me despite feeling like they might dissolve beneath me. I washed my hands in the kitchen sink, scrubbing until my skin turned red, as if I could wash away the betrayal along with the germs.
I glanced at the clock. 8:47 p.m. Marcus would be home soon from his "therapy appointment." The words tasted bitter in my mind now. I practiced my expression in the hallway mirror—concerned, supportive wife. The role I'd played perfectly for three years without knowing it was all a performance.
At 9:00 p.m. sharp, I heard his key in the lock. I was sitting on the couch, a book open on my lap though I couldn't have told you a single word on the page.
"Hey, sweetheart," Marcus called, his voice carrying the familiar note of exhaustion he always had after these appointments.
I looked up, studying him with new eyes. The slight flush to his cheeks. The careful way he set down his bag. The practiced slump of his shoulders—all part of the act.
"How was therapy?" I asked, my voice remarkably steady.
Marcus sighed heavily, coming over to kiss my forehead. "Another grueling session. Dr. Winters thinks we might be making progress, but..." He trailed off, shaking his head in that self-deprecating way I'd always found so endearing.
I forced a smile, reaching up to squeeze his hand. "I'm proud of you for trying so hard."
He smiled back, relief evident in his eyes. He believed I was still fooled. Behind my smile, my mind was already formulating a plan. I would not confront him. Not yet. First, I needed to know everything—every lie, every betrayal, every dollar.
As he walked toward the kitchen, I watched his back, the familiar shape of the man I thought I knew. The man who had just become a stranger.
What else was hidden beneath the drain of our marriage? I intended to find out.
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