What Clara Found Under His Mistress’s Hands Changed Everything-Tep

The elevator in Marcus Foster’s building had always made me feel like I was being delivered somewhere important.

That night, it only made me feel foolish.

I stood under the brushed steel ceiling with a paper bag of anniversary dinner hooked over my wrist, listening to the soft electric hum as the numbers climbed.

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The bag was warm against my coat sleeve.

Butter, rosemary, and steak filled the tiny elevator, too intimate for a woman whose husband had already canceled dinner once that night.

At seven, Marcus had called and said the Singapore deal was impossible.

At eight-thirty, he texted that he would make it up to me.

At nine-forty-five, I decided surprise was still allowed inside a marriage.

I had a key card to the building because I had been there too many times to count.

I knew which security guard kept peppermints in the drawer.

I knew the elevator that shuddered at the twelfth floor.

I knew Marcus’s office door was almost never closed, and when it was, it meant he was on a partner call.

I did not knock.

That is the small detail people always stop on when they hear the story.

They ask whether I should have knocked, as if the great failure of my marriage was my manners.

But I was his wife.

I had brought dinner.

I had opened that door a hundred times before.

The room was not dark.

His desk lamp was on, warm and gold, cutting a little circle through the blue-black city behind the windows.

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