Then another.
“Don’t worry. I’ll deal with Whitney after my birthday.”
And one more.
“She’s always at the gym like it’ll help.”
The phone did not belong to her.
It belonged to the woman her husband was seeing.
She stood in the parking lot and stared at the screen, her hands shaking. Then she opened the full message thread, because once the ground opens beneath you, there is no choosing whether or not to look down.
“Devin, she’s too dense to take a hint.”
“The kids look just like her. I can’t stand it.”
She pulled out her own phone and photographed every message on the screen before it could lock. Then she walked back inside.
The woman was at the front desk, speaking to a manager, clearly distressed. Tall, brown hair in a loose bun. Whitney recognized her in the vague way you recognize someone you have shared a space with for months without ever really speaking. They had nodded at each other in passing. Competed once for the same locker. Reached for the same outlet in the changing room on a busy morning.
Nothing more than polite strangers.
When the woman turned and saw Whitney approaching, relief crossed her face immediately.
“Oh my goodness. You found it. Thank you so much.”
Whitney handed the phone over and kept her expression neutral.
The woman looked at her for a moment, something uncertain moving behind her eyes.
“Are you okay?”
“Long day,” Whitney said.
The woman nodded and left.
Whitney stood at the desk and watched her go, holding the knowledge that she now carried like something breakable inside a bag she could not set down.
The Drive Home and the Decision
The drive back was a blur of traffic lights and interior noise.
Every instinct she had told her to call Frank immediately. To say what she knew. To let the confrontation happen on the side of a road somewhere, sharp and unplanned and honest.
But then she thought about Spencer’s face at breakfast that morning. About Mia’s careful whisper. About her youngest, Darren, who had made everyone laugh the night before by tripping over the cat and turning it into a whole performance.
She thought about what kind of story she wanted to be able to tell her children about this moment.
She did not want to be the person Frank would describe as unstable or vindictive or out of control. She did not want to give him a single tool to use against her in the version of events he would eventually share.
She wanted to choose how this ended.
By the time she pulled into the driveway, she had a clearer sense of what that meant.
When Frank came into the kitchen that evening, she was making spaghetti. His favorite. She smiled at the right moments, answered his questions about the party arrangements, and let him believe everything was exactly as he expected it to be.
He watched her with faint suspicion.
“You’re acting strange.”
“You wanted the perfect party,” she said. “I’m making sure you get it.”
He studied her for a moment, found nothing he could identify, and let it go.
That night, after the children were in bed, she sat at the dining table and printed every message she had photographed. Page after page came through the printer and into her hands. She organized them into a notebook, and with each page, something inside her became steadier.
She was not imagining things.
She was not overreacting.
She had it in writing.
The Week Before the Party
The days that followed required a particular kind of internal discipline.
She smiled at the right times. She reminded Frank about guests he had forgotten to invite. She let him believe she was softening, trying harder, becoming the version of herself he had always wanted her to be.
At school pickup, Mia slipped her hand into Whitney’s and asked if she could wear her rainbow dress to the birthday dinner.
“You’ll outshine the cake,” Whitney told her.
Mia grinned and skipped ahead toward the car.
A woman from Frank’s office stopped Whitney in the grocery store and said she must be a saint for pulling this whole celebration together.
Whitney smiled and said nothing more than was necessary.
At home, Spencer lingered near the kitchen one afternoon holding his school picture, watching her with the careful attention of a child who senses that something is not being said.
“Are you okay, Mom?”
She pulled him into a hug and held on.
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