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Realized 25

Realized 25

Chapter 3 

“Mr. Whitmore’s spending big bucks on Lila-everyone in the industry’s saying he’d rather have beauty than business, haha!” 

“Exactly!” Some pot-bellied guy raised his glass. “Lila, why don’t you join us in toasting Mr. Whitmore?” 

I froze in the corner. 

Jasper was allergic to alcohol-he never drank, not even at business dinners. I was always the one running interference, taking those drinks for him. But there he was with a wine glass in front of him while Lila pouted: “I don’t drink! My babe would never make me.” 

“Right, babe?” 

She wrapped herself around Jasper’s arm, and he actually picked up that glass, giving the man a cool look. 

‘Lila doesn’t drink.” 

‘But if we’re toasting, how about Mr. Carter and I have one instead?” 

watched Jasper down that entire glass while everyone cheered. 

ila blushed and gushed about what a hero he was, and Jasper just smiled indulgently and pinched her cheek. 

felt like I was being sliced open with a rusty blade, watching myself become shredded while still clinging to the hope that maybe this was all some nisunderstanding. 

‘mma grabbed my swaying body and was ready to storm in there and tear Jasper apart: “That son of a bitch!” 

held her back and pulled out my phone to call Jasper. 

was still desperately hoping he’d give me some explanation, tell me there was more to the story. I watched him glance at his buzzing phone, then look at Lila with a complicated expression. 

Vithout hesitation, she declined the call. 

he clung to his arm again, reminding him: “You promised.” 

You said you’d have my back.” 

stubbornly kept calling back. 

lis phone lit up and went dark, lit up and went dark, until finally Jasper made his choice. 

Yeah.” 

I promised.” 

le flipped his phone face down, completely cutting off my calls. Lila beamed at him, and that smile became the final straw that broke me. 

could barely stay on my feet, but I managed to pull together enough clarity to tell Emma: “Security cameras.” 

The cameras,” my voice was shaking as I pointed up at them. “Save the footage. I need evidence.” 

looked from the cameras to Jasper’s face, which was getting paler by the second, and told Emma: “If Jasper’s made his choice, then I’m not going to make things asy for him.” 

got in Emma’s car and looked through all the evidence she’d gathered. 

Photos of Jasper and Lila playing tourist together. 

Lila’s Instagram was like this massive web, weaving together her and Jasper’s love story-a story that never included me. 

saw a video from when I was on that business trip last month. Lila was sitting in my Tesla, recording herself. 

In the video, she was grinning: “OMG you guys, hubby’s car broke down so he got me a new ride! It’s pretty girly though, so I’m gonna surprise him with a little something special.” 

She was recording custom GPS messages, then put her finger to her lips and winked at the camera. 

“Wanna guess?” 

“Think my honey will like this surprise? Think he’ll buy me those cookies?” 

Fighting back nausea, I kept scrolling and found photos from the day I was at the fertility clinic for IVF prep. Ila had been at the same women’s hospital, holding test results and looking all coy. 

“Your girl’s missed her period for a month and a half!” 

“Drop your guesses in the comments-is it just irregular cycles, or…” She giggled. “Am 1 about to become a mommy?” 

“That fucking bitch!” Emma was pounding the steering wheel, but I’d moved past the initial rage and heartbreak into something colder. 

Jasper has low sperm count,” I told her. 

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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