A Marriage’s End Novel – My husband has been lying to me. He is attending a gala with his secretary Iris, instead of being away on business. I plan to seduce him in public at the gala, exposing the truth about our marriage before leaving him forever. “Why did you do that? Have you lost your mind?” he roared. ‘Stay with me, please! You can go in the morning?’ my tear-filled eyes begged him. The cracked phone blared with a notification, shattering the moment. “I’m sorry, Colette, Iris is waiting for me. I have to pick her up and head to the airport. Our flight leaves soon.” He turned away, but I clutched his arm. “Matt, please, just for tonight, stay with me.” In the grand scheme of things, it didn’t matter if he stayed the night or not. But it mattered to me. For once, I wanted to prove that I mattered more than his cool blonde secretary.
“Is Mr. Angelis there?” a hurried voice asked. The man introduced himself as Dereck. “No, Matt isn’t home. He’s in Brisbane until tomorrow,” Colette replied, her tone flat and resigned. She was ready to end the call and retreat back to the comfort of her bed when Dereck’s response froze her in place. He laughed. “Oh, is that what he told you?” A cold drop of fear slithered down her spine. “What is that supposed to mean?” she asked, her voice barely above a whisper, a mixture of fear and anger lacing her words. There was a pause on the other end of the line, and Colette could almost hear the gears turning in Dereck’s mind as he realized his slip. “What?” She stammered, before abruptly cutting the call. Matheo would attend the gala with Iris, and they would be the perfect couple, the power duo that everyone admired.
Meanwhile, Colette would be here, in this cold, empty house, a prisoner of her own despair. She sat down on the edge of the bed, her body trembling with a mixture of rage and sorrow. Tears streamed down her face, but she made no move to wipe them away. What was the point? The man she had loved with all her heart, the man she had trusted implicitly, had chosen another over her. He had lied to her, betrayed her, and now he was flaunting that betrayal in the most public way possible. But this was new! Now, he had started lying to her. So, that he could attend the gala with Iris without his “stupid, unreasonable” wife demanding to be taken to a public place with him? He wouldn’t want that burden on him now, would he? Maybe her marriage was over. Maybe her husband had only ever wanted her for one thing: intercourse. If that was the case, then tonight, she would be the epitome of intercourse. She would get ready to seduce him in public, and the whole world would see the actual of their marriage before she left him forever. If he wanted her as the bimbo, he will get the bimbo.
Colette lay in bed, just as Matheo had left her twelve hours ago. She hadn’t moved, hadn’t eaten, and barely blinked. It was as if she had lost the will to do anything but breathe. The weight of the impending decision pressed down on her chest, making it hard to draw in a full breath. She loved Matheo dearly and didn’t want to leave him, but tonight, if he failed to give her even a glimmer of hope that their marriage could survive, she would have to make the hardest decision of her life. She lay there, unmoving, wondering what her life would be like without Matheo. Dread clutched at her stomach, twisting it into painful knots. Where would she go? What would she do? He was her only family; she had no one else. Her uncle and aunt had been all too glad to finally get rid of her after she married Matheo right out of college. They wouldn’t take her back now. She felt foolish for ever thinking they might.
It was 9 o’clock at night. Her dry eyes shifted to the clock on the wall, watching the minute hand move faster and faster. That morning, she had begged Matheo to return home early so they could go out somewhere together, alone. He had nodded and dismissed her with the same monotonous tone he used for all her pleas, like the mechanical beep of a machine. Over breakfast, she had asked him again, “Where do you think we should go for dinner?” “Wherever you want, darling,” he had replied, not even looking at her. She hadn’t pecked him goodbye, a habit she had stopped a month ago. He hadn’t noticed. Sometimes she felt like he wasn’t even aware she was there, except when he wanted intercourse at night or to show her off at fancy parties as arm candy. At those events, he would charm investors and talk business, always standing next to that blonde secretary. And she had been so foolish, so naive. At 19, having never known love of any kind, she had been desperate for it. Her uncle and aunt provided everything she needed materially but never love or affection.
She had been a decorative vase in their grand lives, always on the periphery. When Matheo came into her life, she thought she had found a man who loved her unconditionally. They had been engaged for the shortest two months, during which he showered her with attention, flowers, gifts, and wonderful dates. She believed he loved her. Foolish Colette! She hadn’t known the real Matheo then. She had only seen what he wanted her to see: the caring, loving, adoring fiancé and the sensual husband who couldn’t stay away from her during their honeymoon. But the honeymoon ended, and the real world encroached. Matheo was a workaholic who seemed to care about nothing but his job. No, that wasn’t entirely true—there was someone else he cared about: his cold, blonde secretary, Iris. In the early blissful days of their relationship, Colette hadn’t known about Iris. She wasn’t using the word “possessive” lightly. Iris clung to Matheo with a fierceness that made Colette feel like she was the intruder.
Sometimes, it seemed Iris was the real wife, attending business meetings, important dinners, and galas with Matheo while Colette was left behind. Colette felt like the other woman, her sole purpose to satisfy Matheo’s desires in bed. He never shared his life outside their home with her, never mentioned his day, who he met, or what he did. He only seemed to care about his work and his secretary. They had fought countless times about Iris. Colette had begged him to put some distance between them, but he always defended Iris. “She’s my personal assistant of ten years, long before you came into my life!” he had shouted during their last fight. “And she will be here long after you’re gone,” he hadn’t said that, but the meaning was clear.
Tears had welled up in Colette’s eyes, and seeing her like that, Matheo muttered something vicious under his breath and stormed into the bathroom, slamming the door behind him. Even if Iris had stayed within the professional boundaries, Colette might have made peace with it. But Iris was everywhere—weekends, late nights—always there with Matheo. Colette was sick of it, sick of being brushed off as if her feelings didn’t matter. Everything came to a head last night at 3 a.m. when Matheo’s phone rang. It was Iris. A feeling of sickness spread through Colette as she watched her husband answer the call and start packing his things while still talking to Iris. “Mat, where are you going?” she asked, though she knew it didn’t matter.
Wherever he was going, Iris would be there, and she would be left imagining the end of her marriage in their cold, empty bed. “Brisbane,” Matheo muttered without even looking at her as he continued packing his clothes. His chest moved rhythmically with each breath, his rare hums barely audible. The phone was still clutched to his ear. “When will you be back?” Colette asked, her voice tinged with desperation. Matheo didn’t reply, absorbed in his conversation with Iris. He walked into the bathroom to gather his toothbrush and toiletries. “Matt?” she called out, her frustration mounting. “What?” came his muffled reply as he packed his shaving kit. “When will you be back?” she repeated, even more desperate this time. “Can you shut up for a second?” he snapped. “No, I wasn’t talking to you. Please continue, Iris,” he soothed, his tone gentle for the other woman on the line.
Colette stood a few feet away, shocked beyond belief. Her face turned ghostly pale as she realized what had just happened. Her patience snapped. She marched into the bathroom, snatched the phone from his hand, and hurled it across the floor. The screen shattered into countless pieces. “Colette!” Matheo roared, his face flushing an angry red as he glared at her. At least he was looking at her now. “Why did you do that? Have you lost your mind?” Matheo roared, anger and disbelief flashing across his face. He watched as an equal measure of pain and fury mirrored in Colette’s eyes. In that moment, it was clear: she was the other woman, the mistress, even if she wore the wedding ring. ‘Stay with me, please!’ her tear-filled eyes begged him, though she knew deep down it was futile. “Matt, stay with me tonight.
Surely, you can go in the morning?” she asked softly. She was certain he would agree, but then the cracked phone blared with a notification, shattering the moment. His expression changed to one of worry, and he looked at her as if she were a nuisance he had no time for. If her heart had broken once, it shattered into a thousand times as she watched him prioritize another woman over her. “I’m sorry, Colette, Iris is waiting for me. I have to pick her up and head to the airport. Our flight leaves soon.” He turned away, but she clutched his arm. “Matt, please, just for tonight, stay with me.” In the grand scheme of things, it didn’t matter if he stayed the night or not. He would leave in the morning anyway. But it mattered to her. For once, she wanted to prove that she mattered more than his cool blonde secretary. Just this once. “Colette, try to understand. It’s important,” he soothed, his tone gentle, but he did not touch her. He stood apart, a stone statue devoid of emotion or movement.
“Just for tonight, Matt,” she murmured, almost begging. “Colette, you’re acting like a child. I don’t have time for your tantrums.” They didn’t speak after that. Matheo finished packing and went for a shower. When he was dressed and ready, he picked up his suitcase and walked over to her still form. She didn’t move, nor did she acknowledge his presence. “Go back to sleep, ti amore. I’ll see you tomorrow.” He pecked her, and she felt the familiar current, the sexual power that always surged when he touched her. But tonight, she didn’t peck him back. She lay there, unresponsive, and she felt his frustration bubbled over. His peck grew frantic, then fierce, before he pulled back with a vicious curse and turned to leave without another glance. “Be stubborn then!” he spat as he slammed the door shut. She heard the car start downstairs, and then he was gone. She lay on the bed, listless, unmoving. She knew her time with Matheo was up. Whether she wanted to see it or not, the truth was clear: her marriage was over.