used to think the worst thing a husband could do was cheat. Turns out, there’s a quieter kind of betrayal—the kind that looks like concern, sounds like devotion, and empties you out one lie at a time.I’m Kate, 35. For four years I believed I’d built something steady with Ethan—pancakes on weekends, jazz on the radio, lazy evening walks down streets that smelled like cut grass. He’d twirl me in the kitchen when a good song came on and I’d pretend to scold him for stepping on my toes. Nothing flashy, just warm and sure.
His mother, Gail, hovered at the edges. I met her twice: once after the wedding, once during a holiday layover. Pleasant, polite, a smile that never quite reached the eyes. “Mom’s private,” Ethan would say. “Sweet, just… guarded.” I didn’t push