Motherhood drained me, and my husband seemed to understand. His evening walks with our baby felt like a kind gesture — a small break for me while he bonded with our daughter. Each night around 7 p.m., he’d strap her into the stroller, kiss my cheek, and disappear into the twilight. I always felt grateful — until the night he forgot his phone.
I found it on the kitchen counter, buzzing with a new message. Instinctively, I glanced at the screen. “Same time tonight? Can’t wait to see you. ❤️” My stomach twisted. I grabbed a jacket, slipped on my shoes, and followed his usual route.
The park was nearly empty, bathed in the fading orange light. I spotted them near the far bench — him, laughing softly, stroller parked beside him. Sitting close was a woman I didn’t recognize, her hand resting on his knee. He leaned into her like it was normal. Like he hadn’t just left his wife behind, exhausted and trusting.
I froze, unsure whether to confront or crumble. My hands trembled, the weight of sleepless nights and sacrifice crashing down in a single moment. I turned and walked away, clutching his phone, now silent in my pocket.
Back home, I laid our sleeping daughter gently in her crib. Then I sat on the edge of the bed and opened his messages. Proof stacked up quickly. Weeks of it.
When he returned, breathless and smiling, I simply handed him the phone. “You forgot this,” I said. And walked past him — out the door, into the night, where my own path waited.