The words were not new. Cruelty had become the background noise of their marriage, so familiar she barely flinched anymore. But Spencer had gone very still over his cereal, and that stillness hurt more than anything Frank had said.
Then Mia looked up with her careful eyes and whispered, “You look pretty, Mommy.”
Whitney bent down and kissed her daughter’s forehead.
“Thanks, baby. Don’t forget your books.”
Frank poured coffee, found it unsatisfactory, and spent another moment looking Whitney over to assess what she planned to wear to his dinner.
She picked up her gym bag and left before the conversation could continue.
The Gym, the Phone, and the Message
The gym was her one hour of peace each day.
It did not solve anything. It did not change the atmosphere at home or improve her standing in Frank’s ongoing assessment of her worth. But for sixty minutes, no one needed her to be smaller or quieter or different. She could simply move and breathe and exist without being evaluated.
She dropped her phone on the locker room bench after class, the way she always did, beside a row of other phones in similar black cases with similarly scuffed edges.
After the session, sweaty and distracted, she gathered her things and headed to the parking lot.
She was halfway to her car when the phone in her hand buzzed.
Frank’s name appeared on the screen.
She opened the notification without thinking.
The message read: “Hi, sweetheart. I’ll soon ditch that pathetic wife.”
She stopped walking.
The parking lot, the cars, the late morning sounds — all of it seemed to go very still around her.
Frank had not called her sweetheart in years.
She looked at the screen more carefully. The wallpaper was wrong. No family photo, no picture of the children. Just a generic image of wildflowers.
Before she could process what she was holding, another message arrived.
“Where are you, Devin? Did you leave already?”
Then another.
“Don’t worry. I’ll deal with Whitney after my birthday.”
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