My son didn't just know; he was rooting for my replacement. My perfect family was a lie, and I was the punchline.
Then, a message from a lawyer on Reddit lit a fire in the wreckage of my heart. "Gather proof. Then burn his entire world to the ground."
My fingers were steady as I typed back.
"Tell me how."
Chapter 1
Alexandra Wright POV:
The first clue that my perfect, suburban life was a meticulously constructed lie wasn't a lipstick stain or a whiff of unfamiliar perfume; it was an iMessage, glowing innocently on the family's shared iPad.
I' d been cleaning up after dinner, the scent of lemon cleaner still sharp in the air. Anthony, my celebrated architect husband, was on a business trip in Chicago. Jacob, our sixteen-year-old son, was supposedly upstairs studying for his SATs. The house was quiet, humming with the low thrum of the dishwasher.
I picked up the iPad from the kitchen island, intending to check the weather for my morning run. But a banner notification was already there, a preview of a message that made the air in my lungs turn to ice.
From a number I didn' t recognize: Last night was insane. Can' t stop thinking about that hotel room. You owe me a Round 2... soon. It was followed by a string of emojis-a winking face, a water splash, an eggplant.
My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic, trapped bird.
My first thought, a mother's instinct, shot straight to Jacob. My son. My sweet, sometimes sullen, but ultimately good boy. Was he... involved with someone? Someone older? The thought was a bucket of cold sludge dumped over my head. The reference to a hotel room felt so adult, so sordid.
I sank onto a barstool, my legs suddenly weak. Jacob was a good kid, but he was sixteen. Sixteen-year-old boys made stupid, hormone-driven mistakes. My mind raced, picturing some predatory older woman from his part-time job at the bookstore.
I needed advice, but I couldn't talk to my friends. The shame was too immense. It felt like a failing on my part. So I did what any desperate, anonymous person in the 21st century does. I turned to Reddit.
I found a private parenting forum, a place I occasionally lurked for advice on navigating the teenage years. Using a throwaway account, I laid out the situation, my fingers trembling as I typed. I kept it vague.
 "Found a suggestive message on a shared device. I believe my high-school son (16M) is in an inappropriate relationship with someone older. The message mentioned a  'hotel room.'  I' m terrified and don' t know how to approach this. Any advice?" 
The responses came in quickly. Sympathy, mostly. Suggestions on how to talk to him without being accusatory. Standard parenting-forum fare.
Then, one comment landed like a stone in my gut.
User4815162342:  "Hold up. You' re assuming it' s your son?" 
I blinked at the screen. What did that mean? Of course, it was my son. Who else could it be?
I typed back, my defensiveness flaring.  "Yes. Who else?" 
Another user, SuburbanGothMom, chimed in.  "Read the message again. Carefully. The phrasing.  'You owe me a Round 2.'  Does that sound like a teenager? Or does it sound like someone used to being in control?" 
The room suddenly felt colder. I scrolled back up to my own post, re-reading the words I had typed out. You owe me...
Redditor_JaneDoe:  "Also, the hotel room. Most hotels require a credit card and someone over 21 to check in. Can a 16-year-old on a bookstore salary swing a hotel room for a tryst?" 
My breath hitched. No. No, he couldn' t. Jacob' s debit card had a fifty-dollar-a-day limit that I set myself. He complained about it constantly. He couldn' t afford a soda at the movie theater without a lecture, let alone a hotel room.
My mind was a fog of denial. This was absurd. They were strangers on the internet, spinning wild fantasies.
But the seed of doubt had been planted. It was a tiny, poisonous seed, but it was already starting to sprout. The comments kept coming, a cascade of cold, hard logic that chipped away at my carefully constructed reality.
 "OP, is there another man in the house?" 
The question hung there on the screen, accusatory and obscene. My fingers hovered over the keyboard.
Anthony.
My Anthony. The man who brought me coffee in bed every morning. The man who was lauded in magazines as the ideal husband and father, a visionary architect who still made time for his son' s soccer games. The man I had loved for twenty years.
The idea was so ludicrous I almost laughed. A bitter, hollow sound.
But the Reddit thread had taken on a life of its own. The commenters were like detectives, piecing together a puzzle I hadn' t even known existed.
Then came the top comment, the one that made the floor drop out from under me.
LegalEagle88:  "OP, what about the eggplant emoji? That' s not just suggestive, it's often used in conjunction with certain... performance-enhancing drugs for men. Specifically, the little blue pill. A 16-year-old boy has absolutely no need for that. A man in his 40s trying to keep up with someone younger, though..." 
The screen blurred. My blood went cold, a slushy, creeping freeze that started in my fingertips and spread through my entire body. Sildenafil. Viagra. The little blue pill. The eggplant emoji.
It couldn't be.
Anthony.
My vision cleared, focusing on the screen with a horrifying new clarity. The absurdity curdled into a thick, choking dread. My stomach churned. I felt a wave of nausea so powerful I had to grip the edge of the counter to keep from doubling over.
He' s in Chicago, I told myself. He' s at a conference.
The sound of the front door opening made me jump. Keys rattled in the bowl by the door.
 "Alex? I' m home! Surprise!" 
Anthony' s voice, warm and familiar, echoed through the foyer. He was home a day early.
He walked into the kitchen, his handsome face breaking into a wide, charismatic smile. He was still in his travel clothes, a tailored blazer and expensive jeans. The perfect picture of the successful man returning to his perfect home.
 "I finished up early and couldn't wait to see my two favorite people,"  he said, dropping his briefcase and pulling me into a hug. He smelled of expensive cologne and the faint, sterile scent of an airplane. He kissed the top of my head.  "I missed you." 
He pulled back, his smile faltering as he studied my face.  "Hey, you okay? You look like you' ve seen a ghost." 
He held up a small, elegant box from a famous Chicago chocolatier.  "I brought you your favorite dark chocolate caramels." 
His eyes were full of concern. The same warm, brown eyes that had looked at me across a thousand dinner tables. The eyes of my husband. The father of my child.
A liar.
I managed a weak smile, my face feeling stiff and alien.  "Just... tired. Long day." 
He set the chocolates on the counter and wrapped his arms around me from behind, resting his chin on my shoulder. His touch, usually a comfort, now felt like a cage.  "Poor baby. Why don' t you go up and take a hot bath? I' ll handle everything down here. I' ll even come up and give you a back rub later."  He knew me. He knew exactly what to say.
I let him hold me for a moment longer, a final, desperate test. I leaned my head back against his chest, the rhythm of his heartbeat a steady, duplicitous drum against my back.
 "No, I' m okay,"  I whispered, pulling away before I shattered.  "I' m glad you' re home." 
He squeezed my shoulders, his performance flawless.  "Go on, I insist. I' ll go say hi to Jake." 
As he headed upstairs, I walked over to his briefcase, which he' d left by the counter. My hand was shaking. I felt a pang of guilt, of shame for my suspicion. This was Anthony. My Anthony.
He' d offered me his phone on the drive home from the airport once, when mine was dead.  "Use mine, honey, check whatever you want."  He had nothing to hide. His phone was an open book of business emails and texts from his mother.
I forced myself to stop. I was being paranoid, driven crazy by anonymous internet trolls.
I decided to unpack for him. A normal wife' s task. A way to feel normal again. I carried his suitcase into the laundry room. I unzipped the main compartment, pulling out his shirts and suits, the familiar scent of his cologne filling the small space.
Then I unzipped the front pocket.
My hand brushed against something small and square. A foil packet.
I pulled it out.
My world stopped.
It was a condom wrapper. A high-end, ridiculously expensive brand he' d never used with me. The same brand, I realized with a fresh wave of nausea, that I had found a stray one of in the bottom of Jacob' s laundry basket a month ago and had chalked up to teenage experimentation.
My knees gave out. I crumpled to the floor, the foil wrapper cold against my palm. The room spun. All the air had been sucked out of my lungs. The Reddit comment echoed in my head. A man in his 40s trying to keep up with someone younger...
The pieces clicked into place with a sickening, final snap.
It wasn' t Jacob.
It was never Jacob.
It was my husband.
My phone buzzed on the counter where I' d left it. A new notification from Reddit. I crawled over to it, my body trembling uncontrollably.
It was a direct message from LegalEagle88.
 "I' m a divorce lawyer, by the way. If your gut is telling you it' s your husband, listen to it. And if it is, don' t confront him. Gather proof. Then burn his entire world to the ground." 
My vision sharpened. The nausea receded, replaced by a glacial calm. The tears that had been threatening to fall froze in my ducts.
I looked at the condom wrapper in my hand. I thought of my son, upstairs, being greeted by his deceitful, manipulative father. I thought of twenty years of my life, a lie.
I unlocked my phone, my fingers steady now. I navigated back to the Reddit app and replied to the lawyer.
 "Tell me how."