My husband and I have been together for 20 years, with 3 kids. George earned money but never really helped around the house, and I was used to it.
But recently, he started cleaning the kitchen and taking out the trash regularly. He said he wanted to be more attentive, and I was thrilled. That is, until last Saturday.
On Friday, George once again cleaned the kitchen and took the trash out. But since we had guests that evening, the next morning, I went to throw out the trash.
When I opened the bin and saw our torn trash bags inside.
There were receipts from a restaurant I’d never been to. A hotel key card, unfamiliar lingerie, used napkins stained with lipstick that I wouldn’t be caught wearing. There were empty bottles of wine that I’d never seen in my home.
My stomach dropped as I realized it.
Initially, I thought I was overthinking, maybe it wasn’t what it looked like.
But what else could it be? Deep down, I knew.
George cleaning our home wasn’t about him being mindful or thoughtful of me. This was all about George covering his own tracks.
While I was killing myself with night shifts at the hospital, George was wining and dining other women in my home. He was laughing with them in the very space where our family had shared so many meals.
He had been using my late nights to cover for himself. He was cleaning up, erasing any trace of his dirty little secrets.
I felt sick to my core. I could’ve confronted him right there. I could have demanded answers.
But I didn’t. I had to make him feel the way I did. I had to break down every bit of self-worth he had.
For illustrative purpose only,.
As if that wasn’t enough, the universe threw a joke at me by giving George a promotion.
“It’s always the horrible ones,” I muttered to myself as I made a lasagna for dinner.
“We should celebrate,” George said, smiling, as he came into the kitchen. He was unaware that I’d uncovered his betrayal.
I agreed, telling him that we would do something special soon.
“Maybe the universe wasn’t pranking you, Whit,” I told myself later as I got ready for work. “Maybe it was just giving you an opportunity to teach George a lesson.”
Later that week, I set the stage.
I invited all of George’s friends over, some of his colleagues, and our family, except the kids. These were the people who looked up to him, respected him, and even loved him.
“Not for long,” I said to myself.
Everyone was excited and eager to celebrate George. To make it even better, I told them that it was a surprise party. Nobody was allowed to say a word.
That night, while George thought I was working another late shift, I waited outside with everyone.
“Don’t make a sound!” I said. “This is going to be the surprise of a lifetime!”
As we moved around to the back of the house, we saw George.
He was in our living room, wrapped up with another woman. They didn’t even notice us at first. Their limbs were too caught up in each other.
But then the gasps came, the loudest one coming from George’s mother.
George turned and was in sh0ck.
“So, George,” I said, loud enough for everyone to hear. “This is how you celebrate a promotion? By bringing another woman into our home while you think I’m at work?”
The room went silent. Nobody could believe that their George behaved like this, in this disgusting manner.
He opened his mouth to say something, but no words came out.
The whispers began. Suddenly, George’s brain seemed to kick in and he stammered, trying to explain, but the damage was done.