He Carried Gifts for His Mistress. His Wife Had Already Written His Goodbye

He Carried Gifts for His Mistress. His Wife Had Already Written His Goodbye

He raised one hand. “Trevor. Stop.”

I stopped.

He folded the paper carefully. “Hannah did not need to prove you were imperfect. She needed to prove she could not rely on you during your child’s infancy. This helps her.”

I pressed my palms into my eyes.

That night returned in fragments. Vanessa laughing under white sheets. My phone buzzing again and again. Me turning it face down. The irritation I had felt—not fear, not concern, irritation—as if my newborn’s fever was an inconvenience scheduled by my wife to ruin my pleasure.

Grace had been fine. A virus, Hannah later said. No hospitalization. No lasting harm.

But Hannah had sat alone in an urgent care waiting room with a feverish infant while I lay beside another woman and resented the sound of my phone.

No court in the world could make that worse than it already was.

When I left Franklin’s office, I drove without knowing where I was going.

I ended up outside Vanessa’s apartment.

She opened the door wearing silk pajamas and a look of annoyance.

“Trevor,” she said. “What are you doing here?”

“She left.”

Vanessa blinked. “Who?”

“Hannah.”

“Oh.”

That was all.

Oh.

I stepped inside. Her apartment was bright and impersonal, decorated in white and silver, nothing out of place. The bracelet I had bought her sat on the coffee table, still in its box.

“She took Grace,” I said.

Vanessa folded her arms. “Isn’t that what wives do when they find out?”

I stared at her. “You knew?”

“I knew you were sloppy.”