I’d had enough. My boss was having an affair with the intern, and I was already planning to quit. So when his jealous wife called—like she always did—I finally told the truth. “Come see him with the hot new intern,” I said. To my surprise, she laughed. “Oh darling, I know! She’s my best friend’s niece. There’s nothing going on.”
I let out a slow, dry laugh. “Oh? Then I’m sure you know about the ‘late-night overtime’ at the hotel?” Silence. “What do you mean?” she asked, her voice tightening. “He checks into a hotel with her. Same room. Every time.” The line went dead quiet. “He said she needed mentorship,” she whispered. “He told me you were jealous of her.”
“So what kind of mentorship happens behind a locked door?” I asked. Her breath caught.
“All those nights… he was lying?” “Oh honey, he wasn’t just lying—he was building a second life.” A loud slam sounded. “I’ve been made a fool!”
“You have,” I said, “but not by me.” “I’m coming there. Don’t let them leave.” She hung up. Minutes later, the elevator opened. The intern stepped out laughing, my boss fixing his tie like he’d gotten away with everything. He hadn’t.
Because his wife stepped out of the next elevator—heels like gunshots, face like ice. This marriage wasn’t ending quietly. I grabbed my bag, walked past them, and finally said: “Good luck explaining this overtime.” Then I left—for good—with the sweetest freedom I’d ever felt.