My wife Rosa and I have been happily married for 15 years now.
We’ve been through many life situations together, and we’ve always found the way out together.
We’ve been more than spouses all this time, we’ve been kindred
spirits and our marriage has been based upon trust and mutual understanding.
We never lied to each other and never cheated. But recently,
things took an opposite turn and our family is now falling apart with a speed of light.”
The guilt became unbearable, and Mark knew he had to come clean.
So, one night, after dinner, he sat Emma down on the couch.
He confessed to the affair, to the terrible mistake he had made, and to the overwhelming guilt that had been eating him alive.
Emma listened in silence, her face expressionless. Mark had expected anger, tears, maybe even an outburst.
But Emma simply sat there, her eyes fixed on him, as if she were
waiting for him to finish. When he finally did, the silence in the room was suffocating.
Then, after what felt like an eternity, Emma just blinked a few times and then spoke. “Why?” she asked.
Mark was taken aback. He had expected questions—who it was with,
how long it had been going on—but not this.
He stumbled over his words, trying to explain, but he didn’t have a good answer.
He mumbled something about feeling distant, about how they had both been so busy, and how he had made a horrible mistake.
Emma nodded, as if she understood. But there was something off about her reaction.
Her calmness was unsettling, unnerving even.
Without another word, Emma got up and walked to the kitchen. She returned with
a glass of water, sat back down beside Mark, and handed it to him. “Here,” she said, her tone almost gentle.
Mark, confused, took the glass and drank from it, trying to make sense of what was happening.
Emma watched him closely, her gaze steady, almost studying him. When he finished,
she gave him a small, sad smile. “Thank you for telling me,” she said quietly. “It’s good that you were honest.”
That was it. No anger, no tears. She simply stood up, kissed him on the forehead,
and said she was going to bed. Mark was left sitting on the couch, stunned and more than a little confused.
The next morning, Emma acted as if nothing had happened. She made breakfast,
kissed Mark goodbye before he left for work, and even texted him during the day,
just as she always did. It was as though his confession had never occurred.
But there was something in the way she looked at him now—a quiet, unreadable expression that made Mark uneasy.
He wrote, “Over the next few days, this weird calmness persisted. She didn’t
bring up the affair at all. She didn’t ask any questions, didn’t want to
talk about it—nothing. It was almost like she was pretending it didn’t happen.”
Days passed, and Emma never mentioned the affair or asked any questions.
She didn’t seem angry, but Mark felt something was off. Every time he tried to discuss it,
she would just smile and say, “There’s nothing to talk about. We’ll get through this.”
About a week later, Mark came home to find Emma with a suitcase. She calmly told
him she needed a break to figure things out. She wasn’t angry—just disappointed.
She kissed him on the cheek and left, leaving Mark standing alone, stunned by her calmness and control.