The call came at 2:47 a.m. on a Tuesday, a shrill, digital scream that ripped me from the first decent sleep I’d had in months. My phone’s harsh ring cut through the profound silence of my empty apartment, the one I’d been renting since I moved out of the house I’d shared with my wife for eight years.
The house where I discovered her betrayal three months ago, captured in vivid, soul-crushing detail through the private investigator’s photographs and the audio recordings I’d made myself. The police station called me out of nowhere,” I would later tell my brother when trying to explain the inexplicable events of that night, though I knew he’d never believe the full, tangled truth. “They said, ‘We found your missing son at a bus stop.
Please come pick him up.’”
“But I don’t have a son,” I had insisted, my voice thick with sleep and confusion. The officer on the other end had simply repeated, his tone flat and procedural, “Please come.”
But I’m getting ahead of myself. Let me start from the beginning, because the beginning is where the roots of this elaborate deception lie.
My name is Calvin Reed, and until six months ago, I thought I had a pretty good life. I was a forty-two-year-old security consultant specializing in corporate surveillance systems, which meant my entire professional life revolved around knowing how to watch people without them knowing. The irony of that fact, considering I had missed my own wife’s affair for nearly two years, was a bitter pill I choked on daily.
I met Belle when we were both twenty-eight, working at different firms in the same downtown Denver office building. She was a marketing coordinator with honey-colored hair and a laugh that could fill a room, a sound like wind chimes on a perfect summer day. I was already building my reputation in the security field, having spent four years in military intelligence before transitioning to the lucrative world of private sector work.
Belle and I married after a whirlwind year of dating, buying a house in Littleton with a white picket fence and a garden she loved tending with a gentle, patient hand. We tried for kids, but it never happened. After a few years of tests, treatments, and heartbreaking disappointments, we just stopped talking about it.
Perhaps that’s where the first cracks in our foundation began to appear. In those quiet, unspoken spaces where we used to dream together, we now just existed side by side, two strangers sharing a mortgage. The affair started, as I later discovered, two years ago when Belle’s company hired Troy Menddees as their new creative director.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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