“Leave it there.”
“You’re always running because of her.”
Because of her.
Not because of the meeting. Not because of leadership. Not because of work.
Because of her.
And in that moment, the doubt was gone. So was the confusion. So was hope. Only one monstrous truth remained, standing upright in front of me like a wall: my husband had been living another life, and I was the last one to know.
I walked in.
The box of chocolates fell from my hands and hit the floor. Truffles scattered everywhere, as if even they had decided to expose my humiliation. Thomas looked up. First surprise. Then fear.
“Margaret.”
He did not say sweetheart. He did not say what are you doing here. He said my name the way a man says it when judgment has come through the door.
Daniel turned pale, mumbled something about coming back later, and fled.
We were alone.
“Who is Vanessa Hale, Thomas?” I asked.
I sounded calm, and that frightened him more. He stood slowly.
“Margaret, please… sit down.”
“I don’t want to sit down. I want the truth.”
He ran a hand through his hair, a gesture I knew too well. He did it when he was anxious, when the children were sick, when money was tight, when he was afraid of losing control.