For seven years, I believed Mark and I were solid. I was thirty-four, a freelance graphic designer who worked from home. Mark was a lawyer—ambitious, charming, always in control. We had a beautiful daughter, Sophie, and a life that looked picture-perfect from the outside.
We were that couple everyone admired—the kind that held hands at the grocery store and shared inside jokes at dinner parties. After struggling for two years with infertility, Sophie’s arrival felt like a miracle, a divine sign that our love was unbreakable.
But that illusion began to crumble on the night of Mark’s promotion party.
The event was fancy—exposed brick, soft jazz, and champagne glasses clinking under the glow of string lights. Sophie wore her favorite pink dress and unicorn clips, proudly announcing to everyone that her “Daddy was the boss now.” I watched Mark charm the crowd, his grin wide and confident, while my heart swelled with pride.
That was until Sophie tugged my sleeve.
“Mommy, look!” she whispered loudly, pointing toward the bar. “That’s the lady with the worms!”
Her voice drew curious glances. My cheeks flushed. “Sweetheart, shh,” I murmured. “What worms?”
“In her house,” Sophie replied matter-of-factly. “The red ones. I saw them on her bed.”
My smile froze. “Whose house, honey?”
She pointed toward a woman in a black dress—Tina, one of Mark’s coworkers. I recognized her immediately. She was beautiful, with dark wavy hair and lipstick the color of sin. I’d seen her before—always too close to Mark, always laughing a little too much at his jokes.
“Daddy said she has worms,” Sophie continued. “I saw them when we—” She stopped suddenly, glancing around nervously. “I’m not supposed to tell. Daddy said you’d be upset.”
My blood ran cold.
Mark appeared just then, smiling as if nothing in the world was wrong. I forced a grin and whispered tightly, “Can I steal you for a second?”
We slipped into the hallway near the coat room.
“She says you took her to Tina’s house,” I said, my voice low but sharp.
Mark blinked, then gave a small laugh. “Seriously? You’re going to start this here? At my promotion party?”
“She described her bed, Mark. With red ‘worms.’ What the hell is she talking about?”
He sighed, rubbing his forehead. “They’re curlers, okay? The soft kind. Sophie saw them and freaked out. I told her they were worms so she’d drop it. I was just picking up some documents from Tina’s place. That’s all.”
“Then why did you tell her not to tell me?”
“I didn’t want you to overreact.”
That was all I needed to hear.
The rest of the night passed in uneasy silence. I smiled through gritted teeth as we said our goodbyes, but inside, something cracked.
That night, as Sophie slept peacefully in her room, I stared at the ceiling beside a man I no longer recognized—and realized the worms weren’t just in Tina’s bed. They were in my marriage.
And I was finally seeing them crawl.
By morning, I had made my decision.
I found Tina’s number on Mark’s laptop, saved under “Work — Accounting.” My hands trembled as I typed out a simple message:
“Hi Tina, this is Laura. I’m helping organize the firm’s next holiday mixer and would love to discuss the guest list over coffee. Are you free tomorrow?”
She replied within minutes.
“Of course! Always happy to help ”
The next day, we met at a café near her apartment. She was effortlessly composed, sipping a matcha latte and smiling like a woman with nothing to hide.
After a few polite exchanges, I leaned in. “My daughter says she’s been to your house.”
Her spoon paused mid-stir.
“She says my husband took her there,” I continued. “That she saw red worms on your bed. I’m guessing those were curlers?”
Her lips curved slowly into a smile. “I was wondering when you’d find out.”
The calmness in her tone made my stomach twist.
“He said it wouldn’t take long,” she added casually. “That once you left, we could stop sneaking around.”
I stared at her, my throat tight. “And you’re fine being someone’s second choice?”
She tilted her head. “I’m fine being chosen—eventually.”
I stood up, holding back tears. “Well, congratulations. He’s all yours.”
On the drive home, I didn’t cry. Not once. There was only a strange, quiet calm—like the silence that comes after a storm, when the damage is clear but the danger is gone.
That night, Mark came home late. I didn’t ask where he’d been. Instead, I opened my laptop and began gathering documents—bank statements, text logs, mortgage records. My fingers moved with certainty, as if they already knew what to do.
By the end of the week, I’d spoken to a lawyer. By the end of the month, the separation papers were ready.
When I handed them to him, Mark didn’t even fight it. His face was pale, his voice barely steady.
“I made a mistake,” he muttered.
“No,” I said quietly. “You made a choice.”
He moved in with Tina a week later.
And I began the slow, painful process of building a new life.
The months that followed were hard.
At first, nights were unbearable. I’d reach across the bed and feel the cold emptiness beside me. I cried until my body felt hollow. But eventually, the tears dried, and I started to feel lighter.
I threw myself into work, joined a Pilates class, repainted Sophie’s bedroom with glow-in-the-dark stars. Each small act became a declaration: We are moving on.
Mark tried to keep things civil during drop-offs, but Sophie began refusing to visit when Tina was there. She’d return home with stories—how they argued during dinner, how Daddy slept on the couch sometimes.
“Mommy,” she said one night as we curled up in bed together, her tiny fingers holding her stuffed bear, “why doesn’t Daddy live with us anymore?”
I took a deep breath, brushing her hair back gently. “Because, sweetheart, Daddy lied about the worms.”
She frowned thoughtfully, then nodded. “Lying is bad.”
“Yes,” I said softly, kissing her forehead. “It is.”
Then she smiled—a pure, honest smile that reminded me of everything still good in the world.
“I’m glad we have no worms,” she said.
I laughed, tears stinging my eyes. “Me too, baby. Me too.”
And just like that, I realized the truth:
The worms weren’t real—but they had been eating away at my marriage for years.
Now that they were gone, Sophie and I could finally live free.
No more lies. No more secrets. Just peace.