For Six Months I Cheated on My Wife With a Girl I Never Met — Until I Opened That Hotel Door and Found Out She Was the Same Woman

My name is Kunle, and I am writing this because the silence in my chest has become heavier than noise.

Right now I am sitting inside my car, parked two streets away from my own house in Surulere, staring at the gate like it belongs to someone else.

Six months ago, I began cheating on my wife with a woman I had never met physically.

Yesterday, I found out that woman was my wife all along.

I am what Lagos people casually describe as a “Big Boy,” and I allowed that label to rearrange my values quietly.

I have a good job in finance, a respectable salary, polished shoes, and a car that starts without embarrassment every morning.

From the outside, my marriage to Tolu appeared stable, structured, and responsible in the way society approves.

Inside the house, however, I convinced myself that stability had become boredom.

Tolu was simple, practical, and focused on home in ways that slowly irritated me without clear reason.

She tied wrapper in the evenings and covered her hair with scarf while helping the children with assignments.

She smelled of onions from cooking and baby powder from bathing the kids, not imported perfume from boutiques.

When I returned from work, she discussed tomato prices, electricity units, and school fees instead of flirting with me.

I told myself I deserved excitement beyond conversations about groceries and responsibilities.

Then one random evening, my phone buzzed with a WhatsApp message from an unknown number.

“Hi, is this Dayo?” the message asked casually.

I could have ignored it, but arrogance made me playful.

“No, this is Kunle. But I can be your Dayo,” I replied.

She responded with laughter, and something small but dangerous began.

She introduced herself as Cynthia, a 200-level student at UNILAG studying mass communication.

Her English was smooth and expressive, different from the hurried domestic conversations at home.

She sent selfies that never showed her full face, always angled carefully enough to maintain mystery.

Her voice notes were soft, playful, and intimate, reaching parts of me I thought marriage had muted permanently.

Soon, every night became dedicated to her messages and calls.

While Tolu slept beside me breathing steadily, I stayed awake under the duvet typing replies in secret.

I muted my laughter so my wife would not wake and question the glowing screen.

Cynthia asked about my dreams, my stress, and my ambitions as if I were still becoming something.

She called me romantic when I sent long paragraphs describing imaginary vacations and expensive dinners.

Those compliments felt intoxicating because they arrived without reminders about responsibilities.

Gradually, affection transformed into requests presented gently and strategically.

“Baby, my landlord is disturbing me about rent,” she typed one evening with crying emojis.

I transferred one hundred and fifty thousand naira immediately without asking for proof.

A week later, she mentioned needing bone straight hair for her birthday celebration.

Three hundred thousand left my account that same night without hesitation.

Then she complained about her outdated phone embarrassing her among friends.

I purchased the newest iPhone proudly, imagining her gratitude.

In six months, I spent over two million naira on a woman I had never touched.

Meanwhile, when Tolu requested money for groceries, I complained about expenses and economic hardship.

I handed her five thousand naira and told her to manage carefully until salary day.

I justified everything by convincing myself that men are wired for variety and excitement.

Cynthia finally agreed to meet in person last week after months of virtual intimacy.

She chose the Continental Hotel and asked me to book a room discreetly.

“I want you to devour me,” she typed boldly, and my heart pounded recklessly.

I told Tolu I had a conference in Abuja and needed to travel for two days.

She nodded calmly and reminded me to call when I arrived safely.

At the hotel, I bought champagne and sprayed expensive perfume on my neck generously.

I wore my best boxers and admired myself in the mirror like a younger version of who I used to be.

Room 304 felt like the door to a fantasy I had financed carefully.

My hands trembled slightly as I knocked.

“Come in, the door is open,” a voice responded from inside the dim room.

The lights were low when I stepped inside cautiously.

A woman stood by the window with her back facing me, city lights outlining her shape.

She wore a red dress I recognized because I had ordered it specifically for Cynthia.

Her hair flowed down her back in the bone straight wig I proudly paid for.

My throat felt dry, but desire pushed me forward.

“Cynthia baby,” I whispered softly.

“Turn around and let me see you.”

She turned slowly, and time seemed to hesitate.

It was Tolu.

My wife stood there, not in wrapper or scarf, but in the exact image I thought existed elsewhere.

She looked polished, confident, and painfully beautiful in a way I had ignored at home.

The champagne bottle slipped from my hand and shattered loudly.

“Tolu?” I stammered, unable to process reality.

She smiled calmly, not warmly, but with control.

Without speaking immediately, she picked up her phone deliberately.

She dialed a number and held the screen where I could see.

My phone vibrated in my pocket instantly.

The caller ID displayed “My University Babe.”

My legs weakened and I sat down heavily.

“You?” I whispered, humiliation spreading through me.

“Yes, Kunle,” she replied evenly.

“I was bored too.”

She walked around the room slowly, observing the decorations I arranged for betrayal.

“I wanted to see if my husband was still romantic,” she continued quietly.

“Turns out you are extremely romantic to strangers.”

Her tone remained steady, which made every word sharper.

She picked up her handbag, the Gucci bag I gifted Cynthia months earlier.

“Thank you for the iPhone, the hair, and the two million naira,” she said calmly.

“I used the money to complete my building project in the village.”

My ears rang as if the room pressure changed suddenly.