They were celebrating an anniversary in a restaurant. When the wife was in the restroom, a woman approached and said: “Your husband put something in your drink”. She thought it was a joke, but then decided to secretly swap the glasses. Ten minutes later…
My name is Alyssa Morgan, and our anniversary dinner was supposed to be a reminder of everything my husband, Ethan, and I had built over twelve years together. A quiet restaurant, soft music, warm lighting—everything looked perfect on the surface. But I had learned long ago that perfection is often where the cracks hide best.
Ethan had been unusually tense all day—checking his watch, fidgeting with his phone, barely making eye contact. At first, I chalked it up to stress. His job had been overwhelming lately, and our marriage had felt more distant in the last year. But I still believed we were strong enough to weather it.
Halfway through dinner, I excused myself to the restroom.
As I washed my hands, a woman I didn’t know stepped toward me. She looked unsettled, her voice low and shaky.
“Are you Alyssa?” she whispered.
“Yes… do I know you?”
She shook her head quickly. “No. I just—listen, I don’t want to scare you, but… your husband put something in your drink.”
My stomach dropped. “Excuse me?”
“I saw him lean over your glass. He looked around first, like he didn’t want anyone to see. I don’t know what he did, but… please be careful.”
Her hands trembled. She seemed genuinely frightened.
My heart raced. The rational part of me screamed that this was absurd—that Ethan would never do something like that. But another part of me whispered that something had been wrong between us for a long time. Too wrong to ignore a warning like this.
When I returned to the table, Ethan smiled—too quickly, too wide.
“There you are. Everything okay?”
I glanced at my glass. He nudged his own closer, casual but deliberate.
I forced a smile. “Yes, all good.”
While he waved down the waiter, I quietly swapped our glasses, sliding his into my position and mine into his. My hand brushed against the stem, my fingers shaking slightly.
If this was a misunderstanding, I would feel foolish. But if it wasn’t…
Ten minutes later, Ethan lifted the glass—the one originally meant for me—and took a slow sip.
I watched every movement. Every swallow. Every blink.
At first, nothing seemed wrong. He kept talking, telling me about an upcoming project. But then I saw it: a flicker in his eyes, brief but undeniable. He shifted in his seat, rubbing the back of his neck. His voice wavered mid-sentence.
Then he froze.
“Alyssa… I feel… strange.”
My chest tightened.
He gripped the edge of the table. His breathing quickened. His complexion paled by the second.
In that moment, everything I thought I knew about my husband—our marriage, our trust, our history—shattered.
And I realized that whatever came next… nothing about our lives would ever be the same again…
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