Four years ago, I married Ethan. His mother was gentle yet reserved, and the two of us only met on rare occasions. Ethan once told me that his mother deeply valued her privacy.
I didn’t question it. I simply accepted it as part of who she was. Life was peaceful—easy, even—until one afternoon when he called my office, his voice trembling.
“Kate… the test results are bad. The doctors diagnosed cancer. She has to start chemotherapy immediately.”
The news shattered me.
I tried to stay calm and reassured him, “Don’t worry. We’ll do whatever’s necessary.”
But chemotherapy was expensive, and my insurance covered less than half. I began staying late at work, taking extra assignments, and draining every bit of my savings to help.
By the end of that year, I had given Ethan $113,000. Every time I handed him money, he kissed my forehead and murmured,
“You’re saving her life, Kate. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
I believed him.
Every. Single. Word.
One Saturday, after grocery shopping, I saw our elderly neighbor, Mrs. Parker, trimming her rose bushes. She approached me with genuine concern.
“Oh, Kate, honey, how are you? You look exhausted…”
I sighed. “I’m alright.
It’s just… Ethan’s mom is sick. I’m working reduced hours to cover the medical bills.”
She blinked at me in confusion. “Oh, dear… you must be mistaken.
Ethan’s mother moved to Arizona about ten years ago. As far as I know, she’s perfectly fine.”
Her words hit me like ice water. I stood there frozen, my heart pounding in my ears.
If she was fine… what on earth had I been giving him money for? I forced a smile, acting as if there had been a misunderstanding, but inside, panic spread like wildfire. I knew I had to investigate.
Two days later, when Ethan told me he would visit his mother in the hospital, I clenched my jaw and said nothing. But an hour after he drove off, I followed. My hands shook as I parked across the street from a building.
A cheap, rundown building. Not a hospital. A motel.
A shiver raced down my spine as I whispered,
“Wait… how could this be possible?”
I sat in my car, gripping the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles turned white. I watched him through the cracked blinds of the shabby motel room he entered. For twenty minutes, nothing happened.
Then the door opened. A woman stepped out. Not old.
Not frail. Definitely not his mother. She was in her mid-twenties, wearing a tank top, laughing as she leaned into Ethan’s chest.
He wrapped his arms around her waist — the same arms that held me every night — and kissed her. My stomach lurched. The truth was uglier than I imagined.
He wasn’t caring for a dying mother. He was supporting another woman. With my money.
I reached for my phone, my vision blurring with tears. Call police? Call a friend?
Call anyone? But something inside me went cold. I wasn’t going to react.
Not yet. I needed to know everything first. For the next week, I followed him after work, pretending nothing was wrong.
What I found made me sick. He wasn’t just seeing her. He was living a double life.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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