I Cut Open My Husband’s Mattress And Found His Hidden Life-Teptep

For three straight months, every single night, I lay beside my husband and fought the same nauseating smell.

Every time I tried to strip the bed or clean the mattress, Miguel got angry.

The morning he left for another business trip, I cut our mattress open, and what I pulled out made my knees buckle.

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At first, I tried to be reasonable.

Reasonable is what you cling to when your own home begins to feel unfamiliar.

I told myself it was damp.

I told myself it was sweat.

I told myself Miguel had dropped a towel somewhere, or left food in the room after coming home late and pretending he was too tired to remember anything.

There are a hundred ordinary reasons for a bedroom to smell bad.

Marriage teaches you to forgive ordinary things.

It teaches you to wash the sheet again, open the window again, buy the stronger detergent, put the kettle on, and act as though you are not slowly becoming frightened of your own instincts.

But this smell was not ordinary.

It clung to Miguel’s side of the mattress.

Not mine.

His.

It rose from the bed in a wet, sour breath, caught in the sheets and curtains and duvet, then lingered in the room long after I had scrubbed everything that could be scrubbed.

I washed the bedding so often the laundry basket seemed permanently full.

I bought lavender softener, antibacterial spray, bicarbonate of soda, anything that promised freshness in neat print on a plastic bottle.

The utility space smelt clean enough to sting my nose.

The bedroom still smelt spoiled.

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