When my husband, Jordan, said he was driving upstate for a childhood friend’s funeral, I believed him. After 21 years of marriage, why wouldn’t I? That afternoon, I decided to stop by our country house. But when I pulled up the gravel driveway, my stomach dropped Jordan’s car was parked by the shed. I found him behind it, pouring gasoline over a pile on the ground.
The sharp chemical smell hit me, and when I demanded to know what he was doing, he tried to block my view. But it was too late. The flames revealed photographs dozens of them. Jordan with another woman in a wedding dress. Holding a baby boy. Christmas mornings. Birthdays.
Vacations. An entire second life. The “funeral” was a lie. The woman, Camille, had died in a car crash two weeks earlier with their son, Tommy the child he’d never told me about. He admitted they’d been part of his life for nine years, hidden behind excuses and business trips.
He said he’d loved us both. I told him he’d already lost everything. Now, we live in the same house but in separate rooms. I don’t know yet if I’ll forgive him or walk away forever. I just know the man I thought I married no longer exists and maybe never did.