The night before our wedding, I used my fiancé’s phone to order late-night takeout. A notification from his banking app slid across the top of the screen: Transaction: Grand Hyatt Chicago. $450. Note: “Penthouse, floor-to-ceiling windows.” My heart did a slow, sickening roll. I opened his messages. The top pinned contact wasn't me. It was a girl—an intern at his firm. The chat history was a graveyard of digital affection: dozens of transfers for $520, $1314, $9999. The most recent message was a voice note from her. I pressed play, my breath hitching. “Last night was all your fault, babe. You were such a beast, I’m actually sore. Think of this as my... recovery fee.” He had replied instantly with a thousand-dollar transfer. Calvin saw the screen. The blood drained from his face, leaving him a ghostly, pathetic grey. He didn't offer an excuse. He dropped to his knees, the sound of his knees hitting the hardwood echoing in the silent kitchen, and slapped himself—hard—across the face. “Megan, I’m so sorry. I was out of my mind... it was a moment of weakness. Please, ten years... don't throw away ten years for one mistake.” Ten years. We were high school sweethearts. We had built a life from nothing. Against my better judgment, I felt my spine soften. I nodded, swallowed the bitterness, and stayed. After we married, Calvin became the "perfect" husband. He texted me his location every hour. He left his phone unlocked on the nightstand, inviting me to check. When I got pregnant and left my marketing job to focus on the baby, he transferred ten thousand dollars into my account every month like clockwork. Everyone told me I was lucky. They said a reformed man is worth his weight in gold. Then came the third month of my pregnancy. Calvin left for the office and forgot his work phone. The screen lit up with a notification from Amazon: “Your item [Lace Chemise & Thong Set] is out for delivery.” My fingers trembled as I tapped the order details. The recipient’s name was “Princess Piper.” The same name as the intern from two years ago. … I stood frozen in the hallway, the air in my lungs feeling like shards of glass. I scrolled through the order history. He had bought the same brand of silk nightgown three times—different colors, each one more provocative than the last. There were boxes of expensive condoms and sets of lingerie that I had never seen. The delivery address wasn’t our home. It was an apartment at "The Pinnacle," a luxury high-rise just blocks from his office. I clicked on the latest product review he’d left. It said: “Fits perfectly. My husband is obsessed.” Attached was a photo of two hands interlocked. I recognized the watch on the man's wrist instantly. It was a limited-edition Jaeger-LeCoultre I’d given him for his birthday. My hands shook so violently I nearly dropped the phone. I managed to log into his secondary messaging app. What I found there didn't just break my heart; it incinerated it. It was still her. Piper. Her profile picture had changed. She was no longer the wide-eyed intern; she was wearing a sharp power suit, posing in Calvin’s executive office. She hadn't been fired after the first time. She’d been promoted. She was his direct report. Their messages were a fever dream of betrayal. Piper had sent a photo of herself in a sheer black lace teddy. Her caption: The battle armor has arrived. Come tear it off me. Seconds later, Calvin sent a location pin for a hotel. At 2:00 AM on a Tuesday, she had messaged: I miss you. His reply was two words: Stay put. Twenty minutes later, he was at her door. On those nights I thought he was sleeping soundly beside me, or when he told me he was "pulling an all-nighter" at the office, he was with her. Every morning I woke up to a "perfect" husband was a lie crafted in the dark. Calvin was a master performer. He’d send me photos of his lunch, tell me he missed me, and swear he’d spend the rest of his life making up for his "one mistake." I had congratulated myself on being "mature" enough to give us a second chance. But the "purity" of our marriage was a curated exhibit. The burner phone held the truth. Tears blurred my vision, hot and stinging. A new message popped up: “See you at the usual spot, Room 1201. I’m going to make sure you’re very, very full tonight.” The sound of the front door unlocking snapped me back to reality. I slid the phone back onto the console table and wiped my eyes with the back of my hand. Calvin rushed in, his eyes darting to the phone. When he saw it exactly where he’d left it, his shoulders dropped in visible relief. “Forgot my work phone,” he said, breathless, checking for messages. “Important clients, you know how it is.” He turned to leave immediately. I caught his arm, forcing him to look at me. “Are you coming home for dinner?” I searched his eyes for a flicker of guilt, a shadow of the man I loved ten years ago. There was nothing but a smooth, practiced mask of affection. He kissed my forehead, his voice like velvet. “Work is a nightmare lately, baby. I’ve got a late dinner with the board. Go to sleep. Don’t wait up for me.” He had said that a thousand times over the last two years. And every time, I had waited up until 1:00 AM, keeping his dinner warm. I never suspected that his "important clients" were Piper, and the "board meeting" was a hotel room. The door clicked shut. I collapsed onto the sofa. On the coffee table sat a small, heart-shaped cake I’d bought earlier. It said “Happy 2nd Anniversary.” Last night, he’d promised we’d celebrate today. One text from Piper, and he’d forgotten I existed. Maybe because I’d already been through the soul-crushing agony once before, I didn't stay down for long. I cried until my throat was raw, then I picked up the phone and called a high-stakes divorce attorney. As night fell, I drove to the Grand Hyatt. It took me ten years to love him. It took ten seconds for that love to die. I arrived just in time to see them. Calvin had his arm around Piper’s waist, whispering something in her ear that made her throw her head back and laugh. They looked like the golden couple of Chicago. I checked into the room next to theirs. In the elevator, two room service attendants pushed a cart past me. On it was a delicate chocolate cake and a box of premium condoms. “Room 1201 again?” one whispered. “That’s three times this week.” “Mr. Killian—sorry, the guy in 1201—is a VIP. Always orders the same thing. Always the extra-large box.” I went rigid, my finger hovering over the button for the wrong floor. “Last time I dropped off the towels, the door wasn't shut tight,” the other girl giggled. “They were right there in front of the window... didn't even pull the curtains. The girl actually looked at me and winked.” “God, some people have no shame.” “Whatever, he’s loaded. Men like that always have a boring wife at home waiting with a home-cooked meal while they’re out here playing games.” The first girl snickered. “If she can’t keep her man happy, that’s her problem.” The elevator chimed. The penthouse floor. The words felt like a physical assault, stripping away what little dignity I had left. I watched them wheel the cart into 1201. Through the door, I heard Piper’s high, girlish voice. “Oh, Calvin! Another cake? We never finish them.” Calvin’s voice was low, indulgent. “If we don't finish it, I’ll just take the rest back to Megan. She loves this bakery.” I gripped my purse so hard the leather groaned. Every time Calvin came home from a "late dinner" with a box of leftovers, I’d felt so touched that he’d thought of me. I had eaten her scraps like a starving dog, grateful for the attention. I walked into Room 1203 and shut the door. Almost instantly, my phone rang. It was Calvin. “Hey, honey. Just checking in. How’s the morning sickness? Still bad?” I bit my lip, refusing to let a sound escape. “I’m going to be really late tonight, so don't wait for me. Get some rest, okay?” In the background, a sharp, rhythmic gasp cut through the silence. “Mmm... Calvin, softer... you’re hurting me...” Calvin muffled the phone, his voice hushed and frantic. “Megan? Sorry, a colleague tripped and twisted her ankle. I’m just helping her with some ice. Talk later?” This time, I didn't scream. I didn't cry. “Okay,” I said. “Go do what you need to do.” “Love you, baby,” he said before hanging up. He really could split his heart in two. One half to tell me he loved me, the other half to lie beneath a woman ten years younger. I curled into a ball on the floor by the window and finally let the sob break. From high school to college. From prom to the altar. Ten years. We had survived exams, four years of long-distance, and the lean years of living in a studio apartment eating ramen. I had watched him claw his way from a junior analyst to a Vice President. He used to work until his eyes bled. Once, when he had a 104-degree fever, he stayed up all night coding. I had held him and cried, begging him to stop. And he’d told me, “Megan, I’m doing this for us. I’m going to give you the world. I’m going to marry you in style.” The love had been real once. That was the part that killed me. At 8:00 AM, the door to 1201 opened. I stood at the corner of the hallway, watching as Calvin led Piper out, his hand resting possessively on her lower back. “Baby, that Porsche you wanted? We’ll go pick it up after work today.” Piper’s eyes lit up. “The Taycan? Calvin, that’s over a hundred grand. Won't your wife notice that much missing from your joint account?” Calvin scoffed. “Megan’s a housewife now. I’m the one bringing in the paycheck. She doesn't have the right to question where the money goes.” I checked my banking app. Half of our savings—my dowry from my parents, my hard-earned commissions from my old job, the college fund I’d started for the baby—it was gone. He’d used it to buy her a condo. He was using it to buy her a car. A wave of nausea hit me so hard I leaned against the wall and gagged. A passing maid hurried over. “Ma’am? Are you alright?” The noise caught their attention. Calvin turned. My hair was a mess, my face pale and puffy from crying. “Calvin, let’s go, I’m starving!” Piper pulled on his arm, her back to me. Calvin’s gaze lingered on me for a fraction of a second—a stranger in a hotel hallway—before he let her pull him into the elevator. He didn't even recognize his own wife. My phone buzzed. A voice note from Calvin: “Morning, beautiful. I ordered some gourmet breakfast for you; it should be at the door in ten. You’re doing the hard work of growing our baby. I love you.” The irony was a physical weight. I walked out of the hotel and found Piper leaning against my car in the parking lot. She looked at me with pure, unadulterated contempt. “You were in 1203 last night, weren't you, ‘Big Sister’?” Before I could answer, she smirked. “Since you know, why don’t we have a chat?” We sat in a coffee shop across the street. Piper was a vision of expensive taste: a Chanel bag, a Rolex, a custom-tailored dress. I was wearing a maternity sweater that cost less than one of her buttons. She was more composed than I was. “Do you know why you can’t keep him, Megan?” She leaned in, her voice a poisonous whisper. “Men like variety. You can’t expect him to eat the same steak for ten years and not get bored. You’re the ‘good wife.’ You’re the one who has his kids and keeps his house. Me? I’m the one he actually wants to have fun with. He’d never put you through the ‘misery’ of childbirth if he really cared about your body the way he cares about mine.” I gripped my coffee cup until my knuckles turned white. “He told me you’re ‘virtuous,’” she laughed. “Which is just a nice way of saying you’re boring.” I reached my limit. I threw the scalding coffee directly into her face. Piper screamed, jumping up as the brown liquid ruined her white dress. “You bitch! You think you can touch me?” I didn't say a word. I raised my hand to slap her, but my wrist was caught in a vice-like grip. Calvin appeared out of nowhere, pulling Piper behind him. His face was a mask of fury I had never seen before. “Megan! Enough!” It was the first time he’d ever used that tone with me. “Are you done making a scene? Go home. Stop embarrassing yourself.” I looked at him, my heart feeling like it was being shredded. “Two years, Calvin. The same girl. You really can’t let her go?” Calvin didn't deny it. He sat down, his voice chillingly calm. “Megan, you’re my wife. That isn't going to change. We’re married, we have a child on the way. Stop acting like a child over a side-piece. It’s not that big of a deal.” A small thing? Two betrayals were a "small thing"? He picked up a napkin and began gently dabbing the coffee off Piper’s dress, whispering sweet, soothing words to her while she sobbed into his chest. I don't remember leaving the cafe. When I came to, I was in Calvin’s car. “I’m taking you home,” he said, his voice tight. “You’re stressed. When you’ve calmed down, you’re going to apologize to Piper.” “Apologize to a mistress? How much of a slut is she that you’re this desperate to protect her?” Calvin slammed on the brakes. My body jerked forward, my head hitting the dashboard with a sickening thud. The world went white with pain. He didn't check on me. He just roared, “Enough! Megan, haven't I given you enough? Why are you so obsessed with her? I only like her body. It’s you I love. Why can't that be enough for you?” I leaned my head against the cold glass of the window. I felt a profound, hollow exhaustion. “Calvin, I want a divorce. I’ll raise the baby alone.” The car was silent for several long seconds. Calvin let out a sharp, mocking laugh and put the car back in gear. “Divorce? With what money? You can’t even afford the hospital bills without me. Sit there and be quiet.” Before I quit, I was a high-earning professional. I was on the partner track. I gave it all up because he said, “I’ll take care of you.” Those words were the greatest trap of my life. Back at the house, I started packing. Calvin ripped the clothes out of my hands and threw them on the floor. “Megan, stop the theatrics. You have no job, no income. Stay put and stop making my life difficult.” He tossed a piece of paper at me. “Piper is coming over tomorrow for her birthday. Here’s the menu. She likes spicy food—make sure you don’t skimp on the seasoning.” “I am not your maid, Calvin.” “You’re the mistress of this house. Cooking is your job.” He walked out without looking back. The next afternoon, Calvin brought Piper and a few of his colleagues over. I came out of the kitchen, drenched in sweat, wearing an apron. One of the male colleagues looked me up and down. “Calvin, your housekeeper is pretty diligent.” Piper giggled, covering her mouth. “That’s not the housekeeper. That’s his wife.” The air in the room curdled. “Oh. Sorry. It’s just... she looks...” They didn't finish the sentence. She looks like a mess. She looks old. “No wonder Calvin never wants to go home,” someone whispered. “He’s got a plain Jane waiting for him.” Calvin didn't defend me. He just frowned and leaned in close to my ear. “Go upstairs. You’re embarrassing me.” My hands, holding a tray of appetizers, were shaking. “Go to your room. Don't come out until they’re gone.” He shooed me away like a disobedient dog. As I shut the bedroom door, a roar of laughter erupted downstairs, followed by the clinking of champagne glasses. A few minutes later, I went back down. “I need you to sign this medical form for the prenatal checkup,” I said, my voice flat. Calvin was annoyed. He grabbed the paper, didn't even look at it, and scrawled his signature. “Calvin, hurry up! We’re cutting the cake!” Piper called out. He dropped the pen and ran back to her. I looked at the paper in my hand. It wasn't a medical form. It was the divorce settlement. I took a long, shaky breath of relief. At midnight, the guests left. My bags were already in the trunk of my car. Piper pushed open my bedroom door and leaned against the frame. “Packing, Megan?” She walked in, her eyes landing on our massive, floor-to-ceiling windows. “Calvin and I love it here. Every time you were ‘napping,’ we were right here, against the glass.” She pulled back the curtain and gave me a predatory smile. “He likes the curtains open. Says the risk makes it better. Did you ever wonder why you slept so soundly? It was because he was right behind you.” I looked at her, my skin turning to ice. She pulled out her phone and showed me a photo. It was Calvin, shirtless, holding Piper from behind. They were flushed, disheveled. And in the background, in the very same bed, was me—fast asleep. She scrolled through dozens of them. Different nights. Different positions. The same background: my sleeping form. “He used to put crushed sleeping pills in your nighttime tea,” she whispered. “I love these windows. The moonlight is so romantic...” The blood in my veins turned to lead. Calvin had built this house for me. I had told him I wanted these windows so I could wake up to the sun and sleep under the stars. And he had used that light to betray me while I was drugged and helpless. I didn't think. I swung my hand and caught her across the face. Then again. And again. Piper screamed, trying to scramble away, but I grabbed her by the hair and slammed her against the glass. “You love the view? Look at it! Look at it until your eyes bleed!” My voice was a primal rasp. I grabbed a heavy wooden chair from the vanity and hurled it at the window with everything I had. CRASH. The tempered glass exploded. The moonlight shattered into a thousand jagged pieces on the floor. Piper fell to the ground, sobbing. “Megan! You’ve lost your mind!” Calvin charged into the room. He grabbed me by the collar of my shirt and threw me away from Piper with all his strength. But the window was gone. I felt my feet leave the floor. I felt the rush of the night air. I was falling. The last thing I heard was Calvin’s voice, a high, desperate scream: “MEGAN!”

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