My heart slammed so hard I thought it might crack my ribs. The thing hidden in the closet felt like a loaded confession, wrapped and tucked away
like a secret life I was never meant to see. Every doubt I’d swallowed came roaring back. I opened my browser, fingers trembling, and typed “Goo… Continues…”
The object was small, stupidly small, for the avalanche it triggered. In my palm, it became every late reply, every turned shoulder in bed, every
“it’s nothing, don’t worry about it.” My chest burned as my brain raced ahead of the facts, stitching together a betrayal from shadows and half-memories.
I was already grieving a relationship that, in reality, hadn’t even been put on trial yet. All that pain, built on a story I’d written alone.
When I finally asked—voice tight, ready for impact—the answer was almost laughably mundane. A tool. A nozzle. A forgotten purchase. No secret lover, no double life.
The real shock wasn’t what I’d found in the closet, but what I uncovered in myself: how eager I was to believe I was replaceable, how quickly fear dressed itself up as certainty.
That night, I made a private vow: to speak before I spiral, to treat silence as a question, not a verdict, and to remember that suspicion,
left unchecked, can do the damage we’re most afraid of discovering.