“You slept with me and then casually recognized my family photo in broad daylight?”
“Because the resemblance is stronger in the picture. And because I wasn’t looking for it last night. Ellie, please.”
You shook your head and pressed a hand to your mouth. Your stomach lurched. The whole room felt contaminated by coincidence so grotesque it bordered on cruelty. You wanted to scream. You wanted to throw him out. You wanted to wake up and discover this was some stress-born hallucination brought on by red wine and late-blooming shame.
Instead, you said the most absurd possible thing.
“My son is married.”
Daniel closed his eyes.
The answer was there before he spoke.
“I know.”
That was when rage finally arrived.
Not dainty rage. Not trembling tears. Full-bodied, bright white rage that cut through shock like a blade. You pointed toward the bedroom door.
“Get out.”
He opened his mouth.
“Get out of my house.”
He started pulling on his jacket immediately. “You have every right to hate me.”
“I don’t have time to hate you. I’m still trying to understand whether I’m having a stroke.”
He flinched but kept dressing. “I ended things with Michael.”
You stared. “Do not say my son’s name like that.”
“I’m sorry.”
“You say you were together. What does that mean? An affair?” Your voice cracked on the last word. “How long?”
His expression made the answer worse before he even spoke.
“Almost a year.”
You grabbed the bedpost because suddenly the floor felt unreliable.
A year.
For a year your son had been living a second life while his wife posted cheerful holiday photos and your grandchildren made handprint cards and you sat by your front window thinking distance was the worst thing a family could become. All that time, he had been carrying a secret large enough to split several lives open. And somehow, like a joke told by a vicious universe, it had rolled straight into your bed on your sixty-fifth birthday.
Daniel zipped his coat slowly, as if any quick movement might shatter the room further. “It ended six weeks ago,” he said. “I found out he wasn’t planning to tell his wife. He kept saying he needed time, that the kids were too young, that he didn’t want to blow up their lives until he was sure what he wanted. I told him I wasn’t going to live like someone’s hidden compartment.”
You looked at him with pure disbelief. “You’re talking to me as if I’m supposed to care about your heartbreak.”
“No,” he said. “I’m telling you because you deserve facts.”