Her Birthday Dinner Became The Moment His Silent Proof Exploded-hihehu

Eric used to believe betrayal would announce itself.

He thought there would be a lipstick mark, a strange receipt, a perfume he did not recognize, or one clumsy lie Daisy forgot to cover.

Instead, it arrived through a family iPad sitting on the kitchen counter while the dishwasher clicked through its dry cycle and the house smelled faintly of lemon cleaner.

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He was forty-two years old.

He had been married to Daisy for fifteen years.

He was not snooping when he touched the screen.

That was the part he kept telling himself later, because humiliation has a way of making the innocent person feel guilty for noticing the crime.

He had only been looking for a shared digital receipt for the property taxes.

It was the kind of task he always handled.

Daisy liked to joke that Eric was the organized one, the bill one, the paperwork one, the man who knew where the warranties were, where the insurance cards were, and when the county payment was due.

He had once taken pride in that.

It made him feel useful.

It made him feel like a husband.

The iPad opened to her email because Daisy had forgotten to log out.

At first, he saw ordinary things.

A shipping confirmation.

A salon reminder.

A chain email from a friend.

Then he noticed a folder with a bland name, something that looked like junk but had too many messages inside to be junk.

He opened it.

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