The day I found out Liam was cheating again, I let out a long, slow sigh of relief. This was the latest in a long, unbroken line of betrayals, and always with the same woman. Over the phone, his breaths were shallow and quick as he claimed to be in a meeting. I stretched languidly, gazing out the window at the endless night, and hung up. I thought of the vow we’d made so long ago: If I ever betray you, may I die a horrible death. A shame no one ever actually dies from it. But the betrayal is always real. I drafted the divorce papers. This broken, rotten marriage was over. 1. Liam came home at three in the morning. He had a satisfied, languid smile on his face as he came to wrap his arms around me on the sofa. A faint trace of perfume, a scent that wasn't mine, drifted into my nose. The old me would have flown into a rage. Where were you? Who were you with? Why does your shirt smell like that? Then would come the screaming, the crying, the sound of things breaking. Liam would soothe me with some nonsensical excuse, and I, pathetically, would believe him. But that was the old me. The me who was obsessively, blindly in love with him. I used to spend hours staring at a photo of us at seventeen. The boy in that picture, the one who had loved me with such sincerity, was frozen in time. Before he left to study abroad in London, he’d grabbed my hands, his eyes intense. “Don’t you dare betray me,” he’d said. “Whoever betrays the other will die a horrible death.” Back then, fueled by love, even a vow that dark sounded sweet. Then came the call across time zones. A girl’s voice answered his phone, telling me he was in the shower. The call didn’t end when the water shut off. I heard their panting breaths, their quiet murmurs. I knew. I sent him a novel-length breakup text. He flew back immediately to win me over, the ghost of that same perfume still clinging to him. “Kaley, she’s just a classmate. Nothing happened. We were just out for a run.” And just like that, I believed him. It seems so absurd now. Liam’s deep voice rumbled above my head, pulling me from the memory. “Why are you still up?” Breathing in that familiar, foreign scent, I gently pushed him away. As he stared, confused, I placed the freshly printed divorce agreement on the coffee table. “Let’s get a divorce.” Liam scoffed and tried to pull me into a hug again. I shoved him off. I just sat there, watching him with an unnerving calm as his composure began to crumble. He shot to his feet, pacing back and forth with his hands on his hips. “I told you, I was in a meeting. I was late, okay? But I came home, didn’t I? I didn’t stay out all night!” 2. The midnight curfew was a rule established after one of his many betrayals. He’d promised to abide by it, and for a few weeks, he actually had, turning down after-work drinks and dinners. But he couldn’t turn down an invitation from her. I had only met Zoe once. When Liam returned for good from London, he didn’t come to see me first. She showed up at my door, asking for a pair of his underwear to bring to him. It was a blatant provocation. I shoved her out and slammed the door. But her woody, cloying perfume lingered in the apartment we had decorated together over video calls. From then on, whenever I smelled that scent on him, I knew he’d been with her. And every single time, Liam had a ready-made excuse. He’d met with her to discuss a joint business venture. He’d run into her by chance outside the office and they’d just grabbed a quick lunch. It was a class reunion; everyone was there. And each time, he would look me in the eye, his gaze achingly sincere, and swear, “Nothing happened. If I betrayed you, Kaley, may I die a horrible death.” And I would believe him. I looked up at the man who had been the centerpiece of my entire youth. All the obsession, the unwillingness to let go… it had all vanished. I couldn't find a trace of it. Liam was still rambling, and I repeated, my voice flat. “Let’s get a divorce.” He froze, standing ramrod straight in front of me. It was finally dawning on him that this wasn’t a tantrum. It wasn’t like the other times. I wasn’t throwing things. I wasn't screaming. I wasn’t even pointing out the evidence and demanding an explanation. I was just calmly ending it. He crouched in front of me, raising his hand to make that same, tired vow. “If I did anything to betray you, may I die a horrible death.” “Then you can go die.” His eyes widened, the color draining from his face. This time, I didn't rush to cover his mouth, whispering, "I believe you." This time, I accepted his offer. 3. Liam looked like a robot that had just been powered down, his hand falling limply to his side. Outside, a roll of thunder broke the silence, and the sky opened up. His phone rang, a shrill intrusion. I glanced at the screen. The contact name read, “Zoe from Accounting.” I couldn’t help but laugh. A plausible, professional-sounding alias. But I already knew. After all, what kind of colleague texts you at midnight saying, I miss you so much. There’s a thunderstorm and I’m scared. Can you come be with me? Liam declined the call. A second later, it rang again. I watched him struggle. “Go on, answer it. She’s afraid of thunder.” A tremor went through him. He grabbed my hand, his face a mask of panic. “Kaley, let me explain. She and I are just…” “It doesn’t matter,” I said, cutting him off. “We’re getting divorced. You can tell her the good news. You won’t have to sneak around anymore. You won’t have to rack your brain for those ridiculous, logic-defying excuses.” I still didn’t understand it. How could he claim to love me and then run to her bed without a second thought? And he was so good at protecting her. After that one time she came to my door, I never saw her again, no matter how hard I tried. Once, I’d followed his phone's GPS, running through the neighborhood in my pajamas and slippers. I was going to catch him in the act, leave him with no excuses left. I beat on the door of the apartment, but there was no answer, just a heavy, mocking silence from the other side. They were in there, together. That perfume, its phantom scent, was a constant reminder that she had never really left. It was only later I realized he had installed a GPS tracker on my phone, too. He was always one step ahead. From his studies in London to his return home, through our entire marriage, Zoe had been a ghost haunting our lives. Time and time again, I would look at the face of the seventeen-year-old boy in the photo and forgive the twenty-seven-year-old man in my bed. Finally, at twenty-eight, I threw the photo in the trash. 4. I was so tired. I didn’t have the energy to believe another one of his clumsy lies. But then he did something new. He dropped to his knees and started to cry. “I was alone in London,” he sobbed. “I didn't know anyone. I lost my wallet, all my IDs, everything. I was just wandering the streets, completely lost, and she found me. She helped me get everything replaced. She was with me through that whole dark time.” His eyes, glistening with tears, looked up at me. During those years he was away, I’d turned down every advance, every offer of a date. I wrote him letters every week, sent him boxes of homemade cookies because I was afraid he’d be lonely. I stayed up through the night, waiting for a time we could talk, telling him over and over again, I love you. I’m waiting for you. It was clear now that none of that mattered as much as Zoe’s physical presence. He hugged my legs, his face wet with tears. “Kaley, this is the last time. I’ll never see her again, I promise!” “I swear, if I ever see her again, I’ll—” “She’ll die a horrible death,” I finished for him. His mouth hung open, his face a picture of conflict. I wanted to see just how deep his feelings for her ran. I leaned back against the sofa, looking down at him. “Say it. If you two ever meet again, she’ll die a horrible death.” He closed his mouth. He lowered the hand he’d raised to swear the oath. Silence filled the room again. I watched the color drain from his face and let out a bitter laugh. His phone rang again. This time, he answered, his voice a furious roar. “Don’t ever call me again! We’re over!” He slammed the phone down and looked at me, his eyes full of desperate hope. I watched his chest heave from the force of his shouting and just felt… empty. “It’s too late, Liam.” 5. “From the moment you were in London, the two of you never stopped. I asked you, begged you, to cut ties with her, but you never did.” “You just found more secretive ways to see her. You faked a business proposal to show me, claiming you had to work with her. You helped her set up her company in the building next to yours so you could have ‘chance encounters’ and lunch every day. You organized a ‘class reunion’ where, surprise, the two of you were the only ones who showed up.” As I laid it all out, he just shook his head, muttering that it wasn't like that. Outside, the darkness began to soften into a bruised, pre-dawn blue. A knock on the door. A woman stood there, drenched from the rain. Liam rushed to wrap her in a towel, his eyes filled with concern. Even through the rain, I could smell that familiar, woody scent. Zoe’s eyes were red as she stared at Liam. “What do you mean, ‘we’re over’?” “Didn’t you tell me you had no feelings for her? That the only reason you didn’t divorce her was because she’d take half your money?” “Why? Why are you ending things with me now?” After that outburst, Liam looked at me, his face ashen. So that was it. He was worried I’d take his money. Zoe’s eyes fell on the divorce papers on the table. She snatched them up. On the last page, my signature sat, quiet and final. Liam tried to grab the papers back, but she dodged him. “Why haven’t you signed it?” she shrieked. “She’s not asking for a single penny!” Her eyes were bloodshot, her voice cracking with desperation. I think Liam finally snapped. He ripped the agreement to shreds, shoved her out the door, and slammed it shut. From outside, we could hear her screaming curses and questions. I remained on the sofa. Liam fell to his knees again, sobbing apologies. 6. After a while, the noise outside stopped, replaced by a woman’s shocked cry. “Oh my goodness! This poor girl’s fainted!” Liam flinched, then scrambled to his feet and threw the door open. He cradled Zoe in his arms, shaking her, his voice choked as he called her name. The girl in his arms was pale and unresponsive. He glanced at me once, then scooped her up. “Kaley, I’m taking her to the hospital. I’ll be right back. Wait for me. I’ll come back and explain everything.” I watched him leave without a backward glance and wondered if he would ever really come back. I just sat there on the sofa. Waiting. At noon, I got a friend request from Zoe. She sent me a picture, a trophy of her victory. In it, Liam was asleep, his head resting on her hospital bed. Next to him was an unfolded pregnancy report. I zoomed in on the date. Two months. Two months ago, Liam had told me he was going on a week-long business trip. He’d checked in with me every thirty minutes. But even that constant surveillance hadn’t stopped him from sneaking off to be with her. He’s going to be a father. He’s mine, Kaley. Zoe’s texts popped up. I didn’t reply. I exited the chat, opened my laptop, and started revising the divorce agreement. If he was going to have a baby with her, he was damn well going to pay for it. Then I called the movers. By the time Liam came back, the living room was full of boxes. He stepped over them and found me in the master bedroom, directing the movers. “Kaley, what are you doing?” I turned to him, my voice cold. “Packing.” “Kaley, Zoe… she has some health issues. I need to stay at the hospital with her for a few days. Can you just wait for me? Please?” he begged. We looked at each other, and a sudden, morbid curiosity took hold of me. I wanted to know how he would handle the baby. A slow smile spread across my face. “Okay.” He looked immensely grateful, pulling me into a tight hug before rushing to pack a bag and hurry back to the hospital.

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