My name is Olivia Parker, 32 years old. I live with my husband, Andrew Parker, 35, and our three-year-old son in a two-story house in Seattle, Washington. We’ve been married for four years—long enough to see every sharp edge of a relationship that once felt perfect.
Andrew always says he loves me, yet over time he’s become increasingly sensitive, easily upset, and often hurt by anything related to my job. And me? I just keep trying to work harder so our family doesn’t struggle. Life in Seattle is expensive. Neither of us has the luxury to slow down.
1. Cracks in a marriage
I work as a marketing manager at a mid-sized tech company. Andrew is a maintenance technician at a shopping center. His salary isn’t high, and even though he works overtime, the pay hardly improves.
Ever since I became a manager, my workload has doubled—client meetings, events, product launches, late-night follow-ups. That means I come home late often. I know it bothers him, but I can’t just quit.
At some point, our conversations shrank to three repetitive lines:
-
“You’re late again.”
-
“You never put this family first.”
-
“You care more about work than about us.”
I tried to ignore it, but it wore me down little by little.
That night—the night everything went off the rails—I had a scheduled dinner with my boss and some partners. I texted Andrew, but he didn’t reply. When I got home, the living room lights were on, and he was sitting on the couch with his arms crossed, like he’d been rehearsing an argument for hours.
“Where have you been?” he demanded.
“You know I had a business dinner,” I said. “I even sent a photo to the team chat.”
He exhaled sharply, his voice rising.
“A business dinner or something else?”
I froze.
“Are you seriously implying what I think you’re implying?”
“You tell me,” he snapped.
Anger surged through me. I unlocked my phone, opened every message from my boss, everything from that evening.
“Here! Look! These are the messages, the client info, the schedule—what more do you want?”
He didn’t even glance at the screen.
“I don’t need to see anything you staged.”
It felt like someone slapped me.
“If you won’t even trust me, what’s the point of talking?”
I grabbed my keys and walked out. Andrew shouted after me:
“Fine! Go wherever you want! Let’s see who puts up with you!”
I cried the moment I closed the car door.
2. A call at the wrong moment
I drove without thinking—just letting the night swallow me up. Seattle’s streets were cold and quiet.
When I finally stopped at a parking lot, my phone rang.
It was Jessica Wilson, my direct supervisor.
“Liv? Are you okay? You sounded upset earlier.”
Her voice was warm, and I suddenly felt like I needed someone—anyone—who wasn’t ready to accuse me of something.
I told her I’d fought with Andrew and had nowhere to go. She paused, then said:
“Come have a drink with me. You shouldn’t be alone right now.”
I hesitated. But Jessica had always been kind, smart, reliable—someone I respected deeply.
So I met her.
We drank more than we should have. I remember crying, complaining about everything I’d been holding in. Then Jessica put her arm around my shoulders and helped me into her car.
“You’re staying at a hotel tonight,” she whispered.
“You need rest.”
After that, everything went blank.
3. The morning I won’t forget
When I woke up, a beam of sunlight pierced through the curtains, making my head pound. I lay on a hotel bed—white sheets, neutral scent, unfamiliar room.
I closed my eyes, trying to piece together last night.
Nothing.
I reached to my side, searching for my phone—
And instead felt a warm, soft body beside me.
My eyes flew open.
Lying next to me, inches away, was Jessica—wearing nothing but a thin sleep set, hair falling over her shoulder, breathing softly.
I panicked and practically fell off the bed.
Jessica laughed and stretched.
“Relax, Liv. You were totally knocked out last night.”
My voice barely came out.
“Why… why are you here?”
“You wouldn’t let go of my hand,” she said casually. “I stayed to keep an eye on you.”
I felt my lungs inflate again—thank goodness nothing disastrous had happened. But my legs were still shaking.
“I don’t remember anything…”
“That’s okay,” she said gently. “You cried, talked a lot, fell asleep. Nothing else.”
Just when I thought I could finally breathe normally, Jessica said something that froze me in place:
“Liv… I’ve liked you for a while.”
I blinked.
“…What?”
She sat upright, her eyes suddenly serious.
“I mean it. I care about you. I know you’re married. But that doesn’t change how I feel. If you’re willing… we could try something. Just between us.”
My heartbeat thundered in my ears.
“I—I can’t. I have a husband.”
Jessica shrugged lightly.
“And your marriage sounds miserable. Last night you said you were exhausted, unappreciated, constantly doubted. I can treat you better. I can make sure your career grows. I can give you stability.”
My throat tightened.
“I need to go home,” I whispered.
“Please… let me leave.”
I grabbed my things and rushed out, the door shutting behind me like a heavy weight falling on my chest.
4. The longest drive of my life
I sat in my car for almost twenty minutes, unable to put the key in the ignition. Everything inside me was shaking.
I had:
-
fought with my jealous husband,
-
left home in anger,
-
gotten drunk,
-
woken up next to my boss,
-
and heard her confess feelings for me—
along with a proposal that could cost me my job or my marriage depending on my choice.
I couldn’t even cry. My body was too numb.
Then my phone vibrated.
A message from Andrew:
“Where are you? Come home. We need to talk.”
Go home?
With what face?
Still, I couldn’t stay in that parking lot forever.
I drove home in silence.
5. The door opens… and everything collapses
When I stepped inside, Andrew was sitting at the dining table. His eyes were swollen—had he been awake all night?
But the moment he saw me, suspicion replaced everything else.
“Where were you all night?”
“I slept at a hotel. I was exhausted.”
“With who?” he snapped.
“No one! I drank too much and just needed a place to sleep!”
He shook his head, anger trembling in his voice.
Before I could say anything else, my phone lit up.
A new message from Jessica:
“Let me know when you’re home. I’m worried about you.”
Andrew saw it.
He froze.
Then looked at me like the ground had fallen away beneath him.
“You were with her?”
I stood there, unable to move, unable to breathe.
In that moment I realized:
No matter what I choose—
resign, stay, confess, or hide—
my life had already reached a crossroad I never wanted.
And there was no easy way out.