I was out at a bar with friends, and the people next to me were wearing our town’s local social sports club shirt. So I asked them if they knew my wife, who was in the club. They responded with “Yeah I know her, I hear she is”—then he stopped.
Looked me up and down. Like he was debating something. That hesitation hit me weird.
I leaned in a bit, nudged him like I was in on some joke I didn’t understand yet. “You hear she’s what?” I said, trying to laugh it off. The guy—tall, kind of smug-looking—shrugged and took a sip of his beer.
“Nah, never mind, man. Just some stuff going around. Forget it.”
But now I couldn’t.
That “stuff going around” lit a match in my brain that wouldn’t go out. I forced a smile, played it cool, but inside I was going over every recent moment with my wife, Luísa, like a crime scene. She’d been part of that social sports club for about a year.
Mostly volleyball and trivia nights. It was her thing. She said it helped her decompress after work, and I believed her.
I mean, Luísa’s always been independent. Warm, sharp, the kind of woman who lights up any room without trying. But lately… yeah, if I was honest with myself, things had felt off.
Little stuff. She’d started locking her phone. Going out early on Saturdays when she used to sleep in.
Once I found a second set of athletic gear in her trunk, not even the right size for her. She said she was lending it to a teammate. I bought it at the time.
But after that guy at the bar said what he did, something shifted. My gut wouldn’t let it go. The next day, I casually mentioned running into some people from her club.
Told her one guy said he knew her and started to say something funny but then stopped. I wanted to see her reaction. She froze for just a second—barely noticeable.
Then smiled and asked, “Oh? What did he say?”
That pause was all I needed. I didn’t accuse her.
I didn’t press. I just started watching. Closely.
A week later, I decided to take a half day from work. Told her I was swamped and probably wouldn’t be home till late. At 6 PM, I parked a block from the gym where her club met.
Waited. Sure enough, I saw her pull in, hop out in her usual leggings and hoodie. But five minutes later, a man followed her in.
Not in workout clothes. Dress shirt, slacks. He didn’t look like he was there for volleyball.
I snapped a photo. I don’t know what hurt more—the possibility of betrayal or the fact that she smiled when he showed up. Like it made her whole night.
I didn’t confront her that night. I didn’t even cry. I just went home and laid next to her in bed like everything was normal.
But the next morning, I made a call to my friend Calvino—he’s kind of a human lie detector. Does freelance security now, but he used to work in investigations. “Just follow her for a week,” I said.
“I need to know what’s real.”
By Thursday, he’d texted me: “You were right. Meet me tomorrow.”
We sat in his car behind a nondescript cafe on the east side. He passed me a file—photos, timestamps, even a video clip.
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