When my husband demanded an open marriage — or divorce — I felt cornered. I loved him, so I agreed, even though the idea scared me. At first, I stayed on the sidelines, unsure if this was really what I wanted. But eventually, I crossed a line that would change everything.
Six months later, I began dating someone. Not just anyone — Ben, my husband’s best friend. What started as casual dates and stolen kisses turned into something deeper. My husband resented it, but he didn’t say a word, keeping his discomfort bottled up.
Then, one evening, Ben confessed the truth: he had always been in love with me, long before any of this began. My husband’s face went pale as the words sank in. Anger exploded, and accusations flew. Suddenly, the arrangement he had forced on us had spiraled into betrayal he never anticipated.
Later, he broke down, admitting he’d made a mistake. He wanted me back, wanted to close the marriage and heal. But I was torn. I never set out to hurt him or Ben, yet now I stood between two broken relationships, unsure which — if either — could be salvaged.