I discovered my husband was having an af.fair with the intern. I didn’t scream, I didn’t beg, and I didn’t wait for him to come clean.

I discovered my husband was having an af.fair with the intern. I didn’t scream, I didn’t beg, and I didn’t wait for him to come clean.

I turned toward the receptionist. “Could you please call HR?”

Ethan’s eyes flared. “Don’t—”

But the receptionist, fully alert now, had already lifted the phone.

Lila’s composure cracked into something close to fear. “HR?” she murmured.

“Yes,” I said, keeping my eyes on Ethan. “Because if he’s been sleeping with an intern, this isn’t just a marriage issue. It’s a company issue.”

Ethan scanned the lobby, and for the first time that morning, I saw real fear—not about losing me, but about losing his image. His standing. The polished reputation he’d curated so carefully.

He lowered his voice. “We can fix this.”

I shook my head. “You can’t fix what you did. You can only face it.”

Then the lobby doors opened again, and two women stepped inside—HR badges clipped neatly, clipboards in hand, faces calm in a way that promised consequences.

Ethan swallowed.

I stepped back, crossed my arms, and watched the first fractures spread through the structure he’d built.

HR didn’t raise their voices. They didn’t create a spectacle. They were worse than that—measured, methodical, inevitable.

One introduced herself as Dana Whitaker, silver streaking her hair, voice firm. The other, younger but equally steady, was Alyssa Greene. They asked Ethan to accompany them. They asked Lila to come separately. They didn’t look at me like I was hysterical or dramatic. They looked at me like I was evidence.

Ethan tried to laugh, but it came out strained.

“This is absurd,” he said, glancing around as if he could charm the air itself. “My wife is upset. We’ll handle this privately.”

Dana’s expression didn’t shift. “Mr. Lawson, we need to address an allegation involving a direct breach of company policy.”

The word allegation made him flinch—not because he was innocent, but because he wasn’t steering anymore.

Lila’s gaze flickered between me, Ethan, and the elevator, as if she could vanish into it. When Alyssa gently guided her down the hallway, Lila seemed to fold inward.

Ethan watched her go, and for a split second, I saw irritation flash across his face—like she’d suddenly become a complication.

Dana turned to me. “Ma’am, can you provide documentation?”

“Yes,” I said. My voice surprised me with its steadiness. “I have screenshots. Dates. Messages.”

“Thank you,” she replied, as if I’d handed her an invoice. “We may need a formal statement.”

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