The shower ran upstairs, steady and distant. My pulse pounded so hard it seemed to shake the phone.
Then another message appeared.
If he finds out about the transfer, we’re both finished.
I stared at the screen, a cold wave moving through me.
This wasn’t just about perfume anymore. Not just about an affair.
Whatever Claire had brought home that night wasn’t only another man’s scent.
It was the smell of something collapsing.
I took photos of the messages, placed the phone exactly where it had been, and went downstairs before she came out of the shower.
My hands were steady by then, which scared me more than panic would have. Panic is human. Steadiness means something else has taken over.
For the next forty-eight hours, I behaved exactly like a trusting husband. Sunday morning coffee. Cleaning the garage. Listening while Claire complained about a difficult client. On Monday, I kissed her goodbye, waited ten minutes, then left the house behind her.
I didn’t follow her to the law firm.
I followed her to a townhouse in Alexandria.
She parked two streets away, checked her phone, and went inside without knocking. I stayed in my car across from bare winter trees, watching the red brick place for forty minutes before a man in a charcoal sweater pulled back the curtain and looked out.
I knew him.
Ethan Mercer.