The door clicked shut, and only then did I let my breath shake. My heart was racing. I needed silence. I needed clarity.My phone felt unsteady in my hands as I scrolled back through Eric’s messages. Voice notes. Photos. A picture he’d sent just the night before—an upscale hotel room, a city skyline glowing beyond the window, a receipt from a steakhouse in downtown Chicago. The timestamps aligned perfectly.Except he hadn’t been in Chicago.He’d been here.Had he planned it ahead of time? Taken the photos earlier? Or had someone helped him maintain the illusion?A soft knock interrupted my thoughts.
“Mom?” Lily’s voice was gentle, careful.“I’m okay,” I said, though it wasn’t true.No, you’re not,” she replied. Then, after a pause, “But… I think I can help.”I opened the door slowly. Lily stood in the hallway holding a small notebook. Stickers covered the front—her school journal.“I didn’t mean to spy,” she said quietly. “But I noticed things. So I wrote them down.”My stomach dropped.My eight-year-old daughter had been paying attention—because she sensed something was wrong.The pages were filled with dates, drawings, small observations written in careful handwriting.Two weeks ago: Daddy picked me up today but told me not to tell you. We went to a woman’s house. She had red pillows and a dog named Max.Another entry: I saw Daddy kiss the lady in the car. She was crying. I think she’s sad. sank down onto the bathroom floor, the journal resting in my lap. Betrayal mixed with something heavier—guilt. My child had been carrying confusion and fear alone while I believed everything was fine.