Her Husband’s Calm Warning Turned A Hotel Affair Into A Trap-kimochi

At the party, Jason kissed my neck like he owned me.

He did it in front of my husband, Daniel, and in front of half the people Daniel worked with.

The ballroom smelled like perfume, buttered rolls, old carpet, and the brass polish the hotel used on the stair rails.

Image

A soft jazz song played near the little stage.

Beside that stage, an American flag moved every time the air conditioner clicked on.

Jason leaned close enough that his breath warmed my skin and whispered loudly enough for Daniel to hear, “Tell him you have always belonged to me.”

Every sound around me thinned.

Forks tapped china.

Ice shifted in glasses.

Someone laughed near the back of the room, then stopped.

Jason’s hand rested on my waist with a confidence that should have warned me.

I had spent eight months telling myself that confidence was love.

Daniel stood a few steps away with a glass in his hand.

He wore the navy suit I had helped him choose years earlier, back when we still did small things like that for each other.

He did not look dramatic.

He did not look broken.

That bothered me more than if he had shouted.

I smiled because I thought the room belonged to me in that moment.

I wanted Daniel to see Jason’s mouth on my skin and finally become the kind of man who fought for me in public.

I wanted the quiet husband who paid bills, fixed porch lights, filled my gas tank, and kept his hurt folded into silence to finally unfold it in front of everyone.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *