This was no longer speculation. It was evidence.
The betrayal now had a face, a name, and a forgotten object that revealed everything Clare had tried to hide with her sleepy voice just minutes earlier.
He lay down without removing his shoes, staring at the ceiling. His heart, which had been racing, now felt heavy. It didn’t hurt yet—but something inside him was shifting.
He had always been calm, fair, someone who preferred conversation. But this time, words would not be used.
If she had the nerve to lie like that, he would have the nerve to reveal the truth—and no one would see it coming, just as she had never imagined he was only a few steps away, listening to every lie in the dark.
Jack woke early that Saturday with a clear plan already formed. The watch left on the table the night before remained there, a silent witness to the betrayal. He stared at it for a few seconds before placing it in a small box and hiding it at the back of his desk drawer. It didn’t need to be shown. Words would not be necessary for what was about to happen.
He sat quietly for a few minutes, organizing his thoughts, then began making calls.
That Saturday morning, in a calm voice that raised no suspicion, Jack called Clare and told her he had made an online purchase that would be delivered that day. He asked if she would be home to receive it.
Clare, still speaking casually, said she planned to leave early and spend the day with her sisters—shopping and having lunch together since it was Saturday. Jack pretended to hesitate briefly, then asked if she could be back around 8:00 to receive the delivery. She agreed without much thought, saying she’d manage it.
Jack thanked her and ended the call.