My husband and I divorced after 36 years. At his funeral, his father drank too much and said, “You don’t even know what he did for you, do you?” I had known Troy since we were five years old. Our families lived next door to each other, so we grew up side by side—sharing the same yard, attending the same school, and following the same routines. We got married at twenty, and for most of our years together, everything felt easy. We raised two children, a daughter and a son, both of whom are grown now. Our marriage was steady and ordinary. Then, during our thirty-fifth year together, large sums of money began to vanish from our joint account. I only noticed because our son sent me some money, and when I attempted to move it into savings, I realized the balance didn’t add up. Thousands were missing. Then more disappeared. It felt as if someone had been quietly draining our life without making a sound. When I asked Troy about it, he offered different excuses each time. “Bills.” “Something for the house.” “I just moved it around—it’ll come back.” But it never did. A week later, I opened his desk drawer while searching for batteries for the remote. Instead, I found hotel receipts tucked beneath a stack of papers. Same hotel. Same city. Same room number. My stomach dropped. I called the hotel, pretending to be my husband’s assistant, and asked to reserve the same room under his name—the one he had stayed in last time. The concierge didn’t hesitate for a second. “Of course,” he said. “He’s a regular. That room is basically reserved for him.” When Troy came home that night, I laid the receipts on the table and demanded an explanation. He didn’t deny anything, but he also didn’t explain. He just stared at me as if I were the problem. I couldn’t live with that kind of lie. So, after thirty-six years of marriage, we divorced. Two years later, he passed away suddenly. At his funeral, his 81-year-old father staggered toward me, the smell of whiskey heavy on his breath. His eyes were red, and his voice was thick and unsteady. He leaned close and slurred, “You don’t even know what he did for you, do you?” “This isn’t the time,” I told him. “You think I don’t know about the money? The hotel room? Same one, every time?” He laughed...

“Of course,” the concierge replied without hesitation. “He’s a regular. That room is basically reserved for him. When would he like to check in?”

I couldn’t breathe.

“I… I’ll call back,” I managed, and hung up.

When Troy came home the next evening, I was waiting at the kitchen table with the receipts laid out in front of me.
He stopped in the doorway, keys still in his hand.

“What is this?” I asked.

He looked at the paper, then at me.

“It’s not what you think.”

“Then tell me what it is.”

He stared at the receipts like they were something I’d planted to trap him.

“I’m not doing this,” he finally said. “You’re blowing it out of proportion.”

“Blowing it out of proportion?” My voice rose. “The money’s been disappearing, and you’ve stayed at this hotel eleven times without telling me. You’re lying about something. What is it?”

 

“You’re supposed to trust me.”

“I did trust you. I still do—but you’re not giving me anything.”

He shook his head. “I can’t do this right now.”

“Can’t—or won’t?”

He didn’t answer.

I slept in the guest room that night. The next morning, I asked again. He still refused.

“I can’t live inside that kind of lie,” I said. “I can’t wake up every day pretending I don’t see what’s happening.”

He nodded once. “I figured you’d say that.”

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