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Realized 5

Realized 5

Chapter 5 

That night, I met up with a few friends at a bar. 

The place was packed and loud, but all I could see in my head was Robert and Chloe tangled in those sheets. 

By midnight, I went home. 

Robert still wasn’t back. 

I walked into the study and turned on my computer. 

The second my hand touched the mouse, I knew why it took him twice as long to get to Chloe’s place after leaving the restaurant. 

He’d been here. 

My computer had been tampered with. 

Everyone has their own computer habits. 

Because my eyesight’s uneven-worse in my right eye, plus astigmatism-I keep my monitor slightly tilted at an angle that’s just right for me. 

Robert’s been in this house so long, he’s gotten too comfortable to notice the details anymore. 

He’d cleared the usage history. 

But I knew. 

My computer didn’t have anything sensitive on it-just academic materials and the research paper I’d been working on. 

hat paper wasn’t just words on a page-it was everything I’d built over three years of research. 

housands of case studies. 

Endless nights. 

And now, conveniently, it was something Chloe could use. 

f it got published in a major psychology journal, it could change careers. 

hange reputations. 

didn’t want to believe Robert and Chloe were that malicious. 

ut I had to prepare for the worst. 

Stealing my research,” I muttered, slamming my mug down, “is worse than stealing my damn husband.” 

poured a cup of black coffee, sat down, and started writing an email. 

y the time Robert came home, it was three in the morning. 

le crept into bed, careful not to wake me. 

pretended to be asleep. 

he next morning, he apologized-said he’d stayed late trying to “break up a fight,” promised to make up Christmas for me, then casually asked, 

So… that paper you were working on-did you finish it? When are you sending it in?” 

That sealed it. 

What I’d been eighty percent sure of last night was now a full hundred. 

smiled sweetly. 

Yeah, just finished it a couple days ago.” 

I’m doing one last round of edits-wording, formatting, the usual.” 

Then, baiting him, I added. “But who knows when it’ll actually get published. You know how tough it is to get into the big journals.” 

It’ll definitely get in!” he said, all fake encouragement. 

This is your field, Ellie. You’ve spent years on this-you’ve got it.” 

smiled back. “Thanks, Rob.” 

o you do know how many years I’ve spent on it. 

[ I didn’t know for a fact that Robert was too stubborn to be hypnotized, I would’ve thought Chloe had put him under a spell. 

I was the only explanation for how he could betray me-ignore ethics, ignore intellectual property, ignore me-and help that woman steal my life’s work.

Realized

Realized

Score 9.9
Status: Ongoing Type:
Realized

The Scent That Started It All

The first sign that something was wrong began with a scent — or rather, the wrong one.
For years, Robert and I had used the same brand of body wash. But that evening, when he leaned in to kiss me, I noticed immediately: this wasn’t our scent.

When I asked, he said casually, “A bird crapped on my head, so I showered at school.”
His calmness didn’t sit right. It was too rehearsed, too effortless.
I joked about his hometown superstition — gathering rice from a hundred houses to wash away bad luck — but inside, my suspicion had already begun to grow.


Something Too Clean

Later that night, before my own shower, I checked his laundry.
No perfume. No cigarette smoke. No trace of the day — just body wash.
That was the problem. A man who’d been out all day couldn’t possibly smell this sterile.
No food, no city air, no sweat — nothing.

I looked closer.
There wasn’t even a single strand of hair around his collar. His shirt looked freshly changed.

That night, he made love harder than usual — mechanical, almost like a duty.
I went along, but inside, I felt hollow. It was duty sex, and I could feel it.
Robert noticed. “You’re not really into it tonight,” he murmured, kissing my neck, trying to sound concerned.


The Therapist’s Curse

I’m a hypnotherapist. People think we’re calm and composed, but the truth is, we swim through other people’s trauma every day. And as Nietzsche said, “When you gaze long into the abyss, the abyss gazes back.”

The darkness I absorb from clients sometimes sticks — their lies, their guilt, their fear. That night, I let that darkness speak.
I made up a story: “My client’s husband’s a cheater — serial playboy, brings his side piece home even after being caught.”

Robert smiled, pretending to be amused. “Not all men are trash,” he said. “Some guys actually have morals. Your husband, for instance — a saint. First and last woman of his life.”
I stared at him, searching for cracks. There were none.
And that, again, was the problem.


The Perfect Husband

Robert was a math professor — calm, logical, brilliant.
We met in grad school: I studied psychology; he studied numbers. Everyone called us the power couple — reason meets reason.

After graduation, we married. He started teaching undergrads while pursuing his PhD; I opened my therapy practice, specializing in hypnosis.
In a small town, people didn’t believe in mental health. They called me a scammer at first. But after a few big cases and word of mouth, my reputation grew. So did our income — and with it, my confidence.

I believed money was freedom.
“A woman’s security doesn’t come from a man,” I always told myself. “It comes from her own bank account.”
With financial independence, I thought cheating would never be part of my story.

But reality doesn’t care about logic.


The Second Clue

The next day, Robert picked me up from work.
He hugged me, smiled, acted normal — too normal. Still that same sterile scent, no trace of life.
So I decided to test him.

I slipped a lipstick into his coat pocket — bright red. Then I acted natural, pretending nothing happened.

At dinner, halfway through the meal, he excused himself to the restroom — gone for ten minutes.
When he returned, his expression had shifted slightly, eyes more guarded.

“You okay?” I asked.
“Yeah,” he replied after a pause. “Something came up at school. I’ll handle it tomorrow.”

Two actors, one stage.
He played the overworked professor; I played the trusting wife.


Proof

When we got home, he tossed his coat aside and went to shower.
As soon as he closed the door, I checked the pocket.
The lipstick was gone.

Classic guilty move.
Then came the ding of a text from the bathroom — followed by his voice, low and tense:
“Who else would it be? Don’t text me. I’m home. We’ll talk tomorrow.”

My heart turned to ice.

Before marriage, we’d made a promise: zero tolerance for cheating. No forgiveness, no second chances.


The Calm Before the Storm

I poured myself a glass of wine and sat on the couch, mind racing.
We didn’t have kids — just assets.
That made everything simpler, colder, more final.

I wasn’t the type to scream, to confront in chaos. I needed clarity.
That night, I began planning — not revenge, not yet, but proof.

Because the therapist in me knew one truth:
People lie. Patterns don’t.


The Dual Facade

Looking back, I realized how carefully Robert had built his image — logical, dependable, perfect. The kind of man who never raised his voice, who opened doors, who remembered anniversaries.
But perfection is its own disguise.

Every small detail — his clean shirt, calm tone, absence of emotion — was part of the act.
I used to think he was composed because he was rational.
Now I saw it differently: he was composed because he was practiced.


The Hypnotist’s Mind

My work as a hypnotherapist gave me tools — to read micro-expressions, body language, subconscious cues.
But it also made me paranoid. I’d spent years studying liars, manipulators, broken minds.
And suddenly, I was sleeping beside one.

It wasn’t just jealousy — it was intuition. The subtle signals my brain picked up before my heart caught on.
Robert’s calm wasn’t comfort; it was camouflage.


The Breaking Point

In bed that night, he kissed my forehead like everything was fine.
I smiled back, pretending I still believed him.
But my mind was already elsewhere — tracing the clues, building a case.

He had showered elsewhere.
His clothes were too clean.
The lipstick was gone.
And now, there was someone texting him in secret.

Piece by piece, the equation added up — and ironically, it was math that betrayed the mathematician.


What Comes Next

As I lay there, I thought about all the stories I’d heard from patients — women gaslit into silence, told they were overthinking.
Maybe Robert thought he could do the same to me.

But he’d forgotten who he married: a woman trained to see through illusions.
And the moment he lied, he handed me the first thread to pull.

I didn’t confront him that night. I let him sleep beside me, breathing evenly, the picture of innocence.
But inside, I was wide awake — plotting.

Because in the therapy room, I help people face their demons.
At home, I had just met mine.

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