Wife Uncovers Husband's Scheme

My phone buzzed with a notification. I glanced down, expecting another work email or maybe a text from Mom about Sunday dinner. Instead, Siri's automated alert made my stomach drop: "Unusual activity detected on Mathew Rodriguez's accounts."

I stared at the screen, finger hovering over the notification. Seven years of marriage had built a foundation of trust between us. Mathew and I had been inseparable since college—the couple everyone envied. He'd never given me reason to doubt him.

Yet something made me tap the alert.

The first red flag appeared immediately: Mathew had changed our Facebook cover photo. For seven years, we'd kept the same image—our hands intertwined against a sunset backdrop from our honeymoon in Bali. Now it was gone, replaced with a generic cityscape of downtown Chicago.

A small change. Innocent, perhaps. But why now, after seven years?

I scrolled through his profile, heart racing. Everything else seemed normal—his profile picture still showed us together at his company Christmas party. His status still read "Married to Payton Marshall."

But that changed cover photo nagged at me like a loose thread on a sweater. Pull it, and what might unravel?

"Siri," I whispered, though I was alone in our bedroom, "show me Mathew's recent activity."

The AI assistant compiled data from our shared accounts—credit cards, calendar events, location history. As information populated my screen, patterns emerged that turned my unease into dread.

Multiple bookings at The Grand Meridian Hotel downtown. Not business trips—Mathew always told me about those. These were afternoon bookings, sometimes just for a few hours, at a hotel less than twenty minutes from our home. Why would he need a room so close to us?

I scrolled further. Duplicate purchases jumped out at me: two identical diamond pendants purchased two weeks apart. Two bottles of the same exclusive perfume—one I'd received for our anniversary, apparently matched by another bought three days later. Pairs of theater tickets for shows I'd never attended.

My hands trembled as I set the phone down. The bedroom suddenly felt too large, too quiet. Our wedding photo on the nightstand mocked me with its frozen happiness.

That evening, I prepared Mathew's favorite meal—herb-crusted salmon with roasted vegetables. I uncorked a bottle of Cabernet and lit candles. Not a celebration, but camouflage for the conversation to come.

When Mathew walked in, he loosened his tie and kissed my cheek. "Smells amazing in here," he said, his smile reaching his eyes. How could someone look so genuine while hiding so much?

"Special occasion?" he asked, eyeing the wine and candles.

"Just felt like doing something nice." I kept my voice light as I filled our glasses. "How was your day?"

"The usual. Meetings, calls, putting out fires." He took a sip of wine. "This is perfect, though. Exactly what I needed."

We ate in companionable silence for a few minutes. I watched him cut his salmon into precise bites, the same methodical approach he took with everything. I wondered if he was equally methodical about covering his tracks.

"I was thinking," I said finally, setting down my fork, "about taking a weekend trip soon. Maybe to The Grand Meridian downtown? I heard their spa is amazing."

His fork paused halfway to his mouth. A micro-expression—surprise, alarm—flashed across his face before disappearing behind a smile.

"That place is overrated," he said, too quickly. "And overpriced. We could go somewhere better."

"Funny you'd say that," I replied, maintaining eye contact. "You've booked rooms there six times in the past three months."

The silence between us crystallized, sharp and dangerous.

"How did you—" He stopped himself, recalibrating. "It's not what you think, Payton."

"What am I thinking, Mathew?"

He set down his utensils carefully. "The hotel has an exclusive dry cleaning service for their executive clients. The best in the city. I've been using their rooms to access it."

"Dry cleaning," I repeated flatly.

"Yes." His confidence seemed to return. "They use a special process for business suits that doesn't leave chemical residue. I didn't want to bring those smells home to you—you know how sensitive you are to strong odors."

I stared at him, this stranger across the table. The man who'd held my hair back when I had food poisoning in Mexico. Who'd cried when we exchanged vows. Who now looked me in the eye and lied without hesitation.

"And the duplicate gifts?" I asked quietly. "Also to protect me from chemical smells?"

His expression hardened. "You've been spying on me?"

"Answering a question with a question," I noted. "Classic deflection tactic."

Mathew pushed his plate away. "I don't have to explain my purchases to you. Sometimes I buy things for clients, for my mother. This is ridiculous, Payton."

But his eyes—those eyes I'd gazed into countless times—couldn't quite meet mine.

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