Chapter 3: The Secret He Buried For Years

Chapter 3: The Secret He Buried For Years
The next morning, Ridge Hollow looked different.
Same houses.
Same streets.
Same perfectly trimmed lawns.
But everyone saw everything differently.
The pool was covered.
The security alarm was reset.
The neighbors stopped pretending they hadn't watched.
And Caleb...
was gone.
Not because I asked him to leave.
Because Marcus had called someone before he drove away.
A lawyer.
Apparently, Vanessa had not only been cheating.
She had also been moving money.
Money from their joint account.
Money Marcus thought was paying for their future.
Instead, it was paying for weekend dinners.
Hotel rooms.
And gifts Caleb had been giving her.
The first thing I felt wasn't satisfaction.
It was exhaustion.
Betrayal is strange.
People think the worst part is discovering the lie.
It isn't.
The worst part is realizing how many normal moments were actually performances.
The coffee in the morning.
The casual smiles.
The "I love you" texts.
All of it suddenly felt like a movie where everyone knew the ending except me.
At noon, Caleb came back.
He stood outside the front door.
No confidence.
No anger.
Just a man who had finally run out of places to hide.
"Marissa."
I didn't invite him inside.
"You need to leave."
"I made a mistake."
I looked at him.
"A mistake is forgetting an anniversary."
Silence.
"A mistake is buying the wrong gift."
Another pause.
"What you did required planning."
His face tightened.
"I love you."
Those words almost made me laugh.
Almost.
Instead, I asked:
"Did you love me when she was sitting in our kitchen?"
His eyes dropped.
"Did you love me when you deleted messages?"
Nothing.
"Did you love me when you told me I was paranoid for noticing?"
Still nothing.
The silence answered for him.
Then he reached into his pocket.
My wedding ring box.
The one he had given me ten years earlier.
"I wanted to fix this."
I looked at the box.
Then at him.
"Caleb, you don't fix a broken mirror by pretending the cracks aren't there."
He looked away.
For the first time since I met him...
he looked small.
Before leaving, he stopped.
"There was something you should know."
I froze.
"What?"
His expression changed.
"Vanessa wasn't the first person."
The world seemed to stop.
"What did you say?"
He swallowed.
"I made mistakes before."
My hands went cold.
"How many?"
He didn't answer.
May you like
And that was worse.
Because silence has a way of creating numbers.