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He Thought I Would Silently Endure

He Thought I Would Silently Endure

img Short stories
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img Gavin
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About

On our fifth anniversary, I found my husband's secret USB drive. The password wasn't our wedding date or my birthday. It was his first love's. Inside was a digital shrine to another woman, a meticulous archive of a life he'd lived before me. I searched for my name. Zero results. In five years of marriage, I was just a placeholder. Then he brought her back. He hired her at our firm and gave her my passion project, the one I'd poured my soul into for two years. At the company gala, he publicly announced her as the new lead. When she staged an accident and he instantly rushed to her side, snarling at me, I finally saw the truth. He didn't just neglect me; he expected me to silently endure his public devotion to another woman. He thought I would break. He was wrong. I picked up my untouched glass of champagne, walked right up to him in front of all his colleagues, and emptied it over his head.

Chapter 1

On our fifth anniversary, I found my husband's secret USB drive. The password wasn't our wedding date or my birthday. It was his first love's.

Inside was a digital shrine to another woman, a meticulous archive of a life he'd lived before me. I searched for my name. Zero results. In five years of marriage, I was just a placeholder.

Then he brought her back. He hired her at our firm and gave her my passion project, the one I'd poured my soul into for two years.

At the company gala, he publicly announced her as the new lead. When she staged an accident and he instantly rushed to her side, snarling at me, I finally saw the truth.

He didn't just neglect me; he expected me to silently endure his public devotion to another woman.

He thought I would break. He was wrong.

I picked up my untouched glass of champagne, walked right up to him in front of all his colleagues, and emptied it over his head.

Chapter 1

Kacey Morton POV:

The password to my husband' s secret life, the one I stumbled upon on our fifth wedding anniversary, was his first love's birthday.

0814.

August fourteenth. Isabelle Humphrey.

I found the drive by accident, a sleek, black stick tucked away in the back of his desk drawer, a place I was only looking because I needed a pen. It was unlabeled, innocuous. But something about the way it was hidden, nestled beneath a stack of old, forgotten business cards, made a cold knot tighten in my stomach.

I plugged it into my laptop. A password prompt appeared immediately. For a moment, I almost closed it, a wave of guilt washing over me. This was Blake' s private space.

But then five years of quiet hurts, of canceled dates, of lonely nights spent waiting for a man who was always emotionally miles away, coalesced into a single, sharp point of resolve.

I tried our anniversary. Access denied.

I tried his birthday. Access denied.

I tried my birthday. Access denied.

My fingers hovered over the keyboard, my mind a blank. Then, a ghost of a memory surfaced. A drunken college reunion of his I' d attended years ago. One of his friends, slurring his words, had clapped Blake on the back and sloshed beer on my dress. "Can you believe this guy?" he' d bellowed. "Still remembers Izzy's birthday after all these years! August fourteenth, right, buddy?" Blake hadn't answered, his jaw tight, his eyes dark.

My hands were trembling as I typed. 0. 8. 1. 4.

Enter.

The drive unlocked.

My breath hitched. The folder was labeled simply: "The Archives." It contained thousands of files. Photos, videos, scanned letters, even screenshots of old social media posts. A digital shrine.

It was a meticulous documentation of a love story. Blake and a girl with vibrant, auburn hair, laughing on a sun-drenched beach. Blake, looking younger and impossibly happy, presenting her with a single, perfect rose. A video of them dancing in a cramped dorm room, his arms wrapped around her as if he' d never let go. Her name was everywhere. Isabelle. Izzy. My love.

There were pictures of them cooking together in a tiny kitchen, flour dusting their noses. He looked... joyful. Genuinely, uncomplicatedly joyful in a way I had never seen. Blake Baird, the man who considered our state-of-the-art kitchen a purely aesthetic space, had once made pasta from scratch for a girl.

I scrolled, my heart sinking lower with each click. I found a scanned, handwritten note from him to her. "Izzy, I' d build you a castle in the clouds if you' d let me." It was a silly, youthful promise, but the sincerity of it felt like a punch to my gut. He had never written me a note. Not once.

I searched the drive for my own name. Kacey.

Zero results.

In five years of marriage, I had not merited a single entry in his secret heart.

The front door clicked open, the sound jarring me from my trance. Blake was home.

I didn't have time to close the laptop or hide the drive. He walked into the study, his handsome face etched with the usual end-of-day fatigue. He saw me, saw the laptop screen, and his expression froze.

"What do you think you're doing?" His voice wasn't loud, but it was laced with ice. It was the same tone he used for incompetent junior architects, not his wife.

I looked up at him, my own voice surprisingly steady. The storm inside me had passed, leaving behind a desolate calm. "I want a divorce, Blake."

For a second, he just stared. Then, a flicker of something-annoyance, not hurt-crossed his face. He walked over, yanked the USB drive from the port, and snapped the small plastic stick in two with his bare hands. The pieces clattered onto the polished hardwood floor.

He dropped them into the wastebasket as if disposing of a piece of trash.

"There," he said, his tone dismissive, as if that simple act could erase everything. "It's gone. Are we still getting a divorce?"

The sheer arrogance of the question stole my breath. He didn't apologize. He didn't explain. He just... deleted the evidence and expected me to forget.

"Yes," I said, my voice as flat as my heart.

He sighed, a long, theatrical sound of a man burdened by a hysterical woman. "Kacey, don't be dramatic. It's ancient history."

"It wasn't history five minutes ago when it was password-protected on your computer."

He walked towards the door, already bored with the conversation. "Look, I know I've been busy. Let's just drop this. We'll go to Tuscany next month. Just the two of us. I'll clear my schedule."

Tuscany. The promise he' d made and broken for our first, second, and fourth anniversaries. It was his go-to panacea, the shiny object he dangled whenever my unhappiness became inconvenient. He treated my feelings like a negotiation, believing every hurt had a price that could be met with a grand, empty gesture. A gesture he saw not as an apology, but as a magnanimous gift from him to me.

I took a deep breath, the air burning in my lungs. "Blake, I'm serious."

His patience finally snapped. The mask of charming, successful Blake Baird fell away, revealing the cold, entitled man beneath. "Are you? You want a divorce? Fine. You think you can make it without me? Without this house? Without the life I provide for you?"

He didn't wait for an answer. He turned and strode out of the room, leaving the anniversary dinner I' d spent all afternoon preparing untouched on the dining room table.

For the first time in five years, I didn't get up to follow him. I didn't try to smooth things over.

He paused at the front door, his hand on the knob, and looked back at me. He was waiting. He was so certain I would break, that I would run to him, that I' d apologize for my "tantrum."

I simply turned my head and looked at the untouched plate of food. My plate.

The sharp, violent slam of the front door echoed through the house.

The silence that followed wasn't peaceful. It was gaping. Hollow. It was the sound of a heart finally running out of love to give. I used to think Blake was just a man who didn't know how to express his feelings, that he was above the messy, ordinary stuff of life.

But staring at that folder, I realized he knew how. He knew how to cook, how to write love notes, how to make stupid, heartfelt promises about castles in the clouds.

He just never wanted to do it for me. I was a placeholder. A convenient, love-struck fool who filled the space Isabelle Humphrey had left behind.

And for the first time, seeing it all laid out in a digital folder, I finally believed it.

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