My husband was in the sh0wer when his phone rang. “You still smell like me. Your wife has no clue,” his mistress laughed. My bl00d turned to pure ice
I only answered because I thought it was work.
That is the part that still repeats in my mind like a cruel little film I cannot turn off.
It was not suspicion. It was not snooping. It was not some trap I had planned.
It was instinct.
His phone kept vibrating on the marble bathroom counter while he was in the shower, and I picked it up because I thought it might be a client emergency. Five seconds later, the life I believed I had built cracked apart.
A woman’s voice came through the speaker, low and amused.
“You still smell like me… and your wife has no idea. It’s almost funny, smiling right in her face.”
I froze.
Not only because of what she said.
Because I knew the voice.
It was my cousin.
My cousin, Marissa.
The same woman who sat beside me at birthdays, Thanksgiving dinners, Sunday cookouts, and family holidays. She had been my coffee date, my gossip partner, the person laughing beside me in years of photos. Somewhere along the way, I stopped thinking of her as extended family. She felt like a sister.
I ended the call so quickly the phone nearly slipped from my hand.
For a moment, I just stared at the black screen. Behind the bathroom door, my husband was still showering, humming along to an old song like this was any normal Tuesday night.
That was the cruelest part.
The water kept running. The house stayed warm. The world kept moving. Meanwhile, my marriage had just been gutted open.
My name is Natalie. I am thirty-four years old. I had been with Owen for nine years, married for four. We lived in a bright loft in downtown Chicago, the kind of place with plants on the balcony, framed travel photos on the walls, and sunlight pouring across the kitchen every morning.
I had built my boutique event design business from nothing. Owen was a senior architect, the kind of man people admired at dinner parties before they even knew him.
Our routines were so predictable that I mistook them for safety.
That night, standing barefoot on cold tile, I learned a terrible truth: you can sleep beside someone for years and still not know who they really are.
I picked up his phone again.
I did not want to. But some part of me already knew.
He had never changed his passcode. He was arrogant enough to believe I would never look.
Inside a hidden folder, I found an archived chat saved under one simple letter.
M.
Messages. Voice notes. Hotel bookings. Fake business trips. Fake family errands. Private jokes. Little red hearts. A whole secret life built behind my back.
I read words that felt like knives.
“I dreamed about you again.”
“Don’t text now, she’s sitting beside me.”
“Act normal Sunday so she doesn’t notice.”
“I miss you more when she’s close.”
I sat on the edge of our bed, holding the phone in shaking hands.
The worst part was not only that he had cheated.
It was how careful they had been.
How patient.
How many times they had hugged me, smiled at me, poured coffee for me, stood beside me in family pictures, and trusted that I would never know.
Then a new message appeared.
“Did you delete yesterday’s texts? Tomorrow at Grandma’s house, I don’t want Natalie seeing anything on your screen.”
That was when the shower stopped.
A moment later, Owen opened the bathroom door with a towel around his waist, steam behind him, still humming.
