After the movie ended, I glanced over at Diane. She was looking down at Cooper, her expression soft and unguarded. For a moment, she looked like she used to — the woman I had married. The woman I had loved. But then, something shifted, and I saw a sadness in her eyes that I couldn’t explain. It wasn’t just sadness, though. It was something else — something deeper. Something unresolved.
“I should go,” she said quietly, as if waking from a dream.
“It’s almost ten,” I said. “And it’s forty minutes back to Durham.”
“I’m fine,” she replied, her voice barely above a whisper.
“Diane,” I said, my tone firm, but not unkind. “The couch folds out. You know where the extra blankets are. It doesn’t make sense to drive forty minutes at ten o’clock when you have to be back here at nine tomorrow morning anyway.”
She hesitated for a moment, her eyes searching my face. Something passed across her expression — uncertainty, maybe regret. Then, she finally nodded. “Okay,” she said, her voice quiet.
I set up the pull-out couch in the living room, found the extra blankets in the hall closet, and left them on the armrest without making it a big deal. I kissed Cooper goodnight, careful not to disturb him, and then went to my room.
It was strange — she was no longer my wife, and yet, having her here in my house, even if just for the night, felt like I was holding on to something that was long gone. I lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, wondering how I had ended up here. Wondering what had happened to the love we once shared.
I couldn’t quite make sense of it, and before I knew it, I had fallen asleep.
The Midnight Revelation
I woke up at 12:40 AM, the familiar ache of being a light sleeper kicking in. It wasn’t unusual for me. I had been a parent long enough to be hypervigilant, always listening for a cry, always waiting for something to go wrong.
But this time, I wasn’t hearing the usual silence of the house. I heard something else — something faint, something soft, but unmistakable.
Footsteps.
I lay perfectly still, listening. The sound was coming from the living room. Diane had left the light on in the kitchen, and I could see the glow from the crack under my door. The house was quiet otherwise. I strained to hear.
The footsteps stopped, and then I heard it. A voice.
A whisper.
“I’m sorry.”
It was Diane’s voice, muffled, but clear enough for me to recognize. I had never heard her whisper like that before. It wasn’t the casual whisper of someone trying not to wake up a child. It was an apology. But not just any apology — it was an apology that carried weight, regret, and guilt.
I held my breath, waiting, trying to make sense of what was happening.
Then, I heard another voice — a man’s voice. It was low, rough, but full of something else — something I hadn’t expected.
“It’s not enough,” the man said. “You can’t keep running back to him every time things get hard.”
My heart stopped.
It wasn’t just my ex-wife and Cooper in the living room.
I could hear the faint sound of a kiss — soft, intimate — followed by the sound of a body shifting.
I froze.
I didn’t know what to do. I didn’t know what this meant.
I didn’t know if I should get up, confront them, or just lie there and pretend I hadn’t heard anything.
But in that moment, as I lay frozen in my bed, something deep inside me broke. It wasn’t anger, not yet. It wasn’t even betrayal, not in the way I thought it would be. It was a crack, small at first, but deep, deep enough that I couldn’t ignore it anymore.
Diane, my ex-wife, the woman I had loved, had moved on — in a way I never expected. She had found comfort in someone else. She had found someone who wasn’t me.
And I hadn’t been enough.
The Morning After
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