When my husband left for Europe, I was left alone with the bitter truth—he had slept with my best friend. The betrayal cut deep, and I couldn’t shake the anger, the humiliation. Divorce felt like an escape, but I didn’t want that. I wanted something else—something that would make me feel like I had the upper hand.
So, I did the unthinkable. I slept with his best friend.
It wasn’t about attraction; it was about reclaiming my power. If he could break our trust, so could I. In some twisted way, I thought it would even the score, level the playing field, and allow us to move forward without divorce. My plan was to keep our marriage intact by making sure neither of us could point fingers.
When he returned, I didn’t tell him. I didn’t need to. For me, the revenge was enough, and in my mind, it was what kept us together. But deep down, I knew that while we stayed married, something fundamental had shifted in our relationship. We were holding onto the idea of “healthy” by balancing our betrayals, but I wondered—at what cost?
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