My husband had told me he would spend the day at the funeral of a childhood friend… Hours later, I caught him behind our country house, burning the evidence of a life I knew nothing about
My name is Élise, I am 46, and I believed that twenty-one years of marriage represented an unbreakable fortress. Until last Saturday, when my world collapsed.
Thane and I met in a small bookstore when I was 25. A chance encounter, laughter shared over coffee, then a year later, a simple and happy wedding. We built a gentle life: two children now adults, a warm home, a faithful dog. Nothing extraordinary, but a reassuring stability. At least, that’s what I thought.
One evening last month, Thane announced in a grave tone:
— “I have to go up north this weekend… it’s the funeral of an old high school friend, Cal.”
I had never heard of this Cal, but I believed his story. I even offered to go with him. He refused immediately, preferring to “go alone.” His haste seemed strange to me, but I respected his supposed grief.
Saturday morning, he left in the rain, his bag barely packed. The house felt empty without him. I decided to spend the afternoon at our country residence, forty-five minutes away, to take care of the garden. But when I arrived, my heart froze: his car was parked near the tool shed.
I called his name, searched the house: nothing. Then, walking around the outbuildings, I saw him. He was pouring gasoline over a pile of objects. When I called out to him, he jumped like a thief caught in the act.
— “Élise? You shouldn’t be here!”
— “And you? You shouldn’t be at a funeral! What are you doing?”
He mumbled an absurd excuse about “burning weeds.” But before I could stop him, he struck a match. The fire flared up. As I rushed forward, I saw what he was trying to reduce to ashes: photographs, hundreds of photographs. Scattered on the scorched ground… (The rest in the 1st comment )
Some were intact. They showed Thane in a suit, beside a woman in a wedding dress. Then holding a baby in his arms, with the same gray eyes as his. Other pictures revealed birthdays, vacations, family moments… with another woman and a child. My husband, at the heart of a second life.
I put out the flames as best I could, my hands burned, my chest crushed by horror. Thane said nothing. Finally, faced with my screams, he let out the truth:
Nine years. A woman named Nora. A son, Finn. They lived two hours away. He saw them once a month, under the pretext of visiting his brother. Nora and Finn had died two weeks earlier, victims of a car accident.
I listened, stunned, as if a stranger wore my husband’s face. For nine years, he had led two parallel existences. He confessed he had loved Nora… but also loved me. Two lives, two families, two loves. And me, reduced to the shadow of his lie.
We returned home separately. At the house, he swore he still loved me, that he wanted to “repair.” But how do you repair a betrayal of nine years? How do you still believe in the man who shares your bed, when I see his smile in those photos stolen from another woman?
Today, I don’t know if I should forgive or leave everything. Maybe a love can rise again from the ashes. Or maybe I must finally choose myself.
One thing is certain: nothing will ever be the same again.