He Mocked Her Anniversary Album, Then The Letter Inside Ruined Him-myhoa

Kathleen had spent twenty-five years learning the small sounds that came before Tom decided to hurt her.

On their twenty-fifth anniversary, the old warning sounds arrived before dessert.

Tom stood in their Palm Springs living room with a packed suitcase beside the door and the custom photo album open in his hands.

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Kathleen had made the album herself, choosing the linen cover, arranging the pages, and writing the dates under every picture in careful black ink.

Their wedding came first, then their first house, then holiday dinners, then the Hawaii trip where he had stopped holding her hand in public.

She had not built it because she believed a book could save a marriage.

She had built it because Tom never looked closely at anything he thought belonged to her.

“Stop being dramatic, Kathleen,” he said, bending one corner of their wedding photo with his thumb.

She sat on the sofa in the emerald dress he had once said made her look old, and she folded her hands in her lap.

“You knew this was coming,” he said.

Kathleen looked at the suitcase.

It was the large black one they had bought for Hawaii, the same trip hidden twelve pages deeper in the album.

That was where she had tucked the letter.

Tom flipped another page and laughed.

“Twenty-five years in a pathetic little book,” he said.

His phone buzzed, and Jessica’s name flashed across the screen before he turned it over.

Jessica was twenty-eight, ambitious, and new enough to believe Tom’s confidence was strength.

Kathleen had suspected the affair for eight months.

There had been perfume on his shirts, late meetings, restaurant charges he could not explain, and finally a diamond bracelet bought with their joint credit card.

“She’s downstairs,” Tom said.

“Jessica?”

He smiled as if the cruelty had made him honest.

“We’re staying at the Grand Vista until we find a place,” he said.

He closed the album with a snap.

“My lawyer will contact you about the house and the accounts, so please don’t make this messy.”

Kathleen had not canceled the reservation at Lorenzo’s because she wanted the evening to exist exactly as Tom expected until it stopped belonging to him.

“And our anniversary dinner?” she asked.

Tom looked her over.

“The album, the restaurant, the dress,” he said. “It’s desperate.”

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