
I told my best friend. She was quiet, then said, “Did you check his phone?”
I did, expecting to find some woman’s trace. But I almost fainted when I discovered that it was my sister’s name in his call log.
Dozens of calls. Some over an hour long. One at 2:14 AM.
I sat on the floor, heart pounding so hard I could barely see straight. My hands shook as I scrolled through messages. Nothing overtly romantic, but way too much warmth.
Way too much familiarity. He was calling her “Mimi,” a nickname only I used for Mirasol growing up. And the hair ties?
Definitely hers. She always wore those thick, colorful ones with the tiny metal clasp. I’d teased her for years that they looked like old phone cords.
I didn’t say anything right away. I couldn’t. Mirasol had helped raise me.
Our parents were always working double shifts, and she’d practically packed my school lunches until I was fifteen. She was the closest person in my life besides him. I didn’t want to believe it.
But I also couldn’t not believe it. That night, I lay next to Arturo—my husband—for hours, barely breathing, as he snored softly. And I hated how normal he looked.
How peaceful. The next morning, I casually asked, “Talk to Mimi lately?”
He blinked. “Yeah, she called yesterday.
Something about your mom’s pension paperwork. Why?”
I nodded. “Nothing.
Just wondering.”
I wanted to scream. But I also wanted more proof. Something undeniable.
A week later, I told Mirasol I’d left something at her place and swung by unannounced. She was in a panic when I arrived, barely cracked the door open. “Now’s not a good time, Marisse,” she said, barely meeting my eyes.
“Why?” I asked flatly. She hesitated. “I… I’m not feeling well.”
Her face was flushed, hair damp like she’d just showered.
She was wearing one of those oversized t-shirts she usually slept in. Something clicked. I pushed gently, but firmly.
“Can I come in?”
“No,” she snapped. Then softened. “Please, not right now.”
I left.
But now I knew. I didn’t confront either of them directly. Not yet.
Instead, I did something I’m not proud of—I set up an old iPhone in the living room and linked it to our home Wi-Fi. Hidden behind a bookshelf. I told Arturo I’d be gone for a work trip two nights, and I watched the footage from a hotel three miles away.
The first night, nothing. He watched a soccer game. Ate instant noodles.
Slept on the couch. The second night, at 11:24 PM, she showed up. She had a key.
They hugged. A long hug. Then she sat beside him on the couch like it was the most natural thing in the world.
They didn’t kiss. They didn’t even touch after that first hug. But the way they leaned into each other—the way their eyes met when they laughed—I knew.
It was emotional. Maybe it wasn’t physical yet. But it didn’t even matter.
Something had been broken. The next morning, I came home early. I told Arturo I knew.
About the calls. About the visits. About the key.
He sat down, held his face in his hands. “We never—Marisse, I never slept with her. I swear to you.”
I believed him.
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