Friday nights used to be sacred. Pajamas, popcorn, a shared blanket, and a favorite movie we’d seen a dozen times but still pretended to be surprised by. Daniel and I were that couple—the quiet kind that smiled in sync and spoke in glances.
But lately, Friday nights belonged to someone else.
I was upstairs alone, rubbing hand cream into tired fingers, the glow of my bedside lamp too soft to distract me from the cold side of the bed. Jason had been asleep for half an hour when I heard it. A buzz, faint but unmistakable, coming from downstairs.
Odd. If Daniel was home, why wasn’t he coming up?
I tiptoed down the creaky stairs. The guest bathroom light was on, water running. And then I saw it. His phone, lit up on the hallway table, buzzing again.
“Jessie calling…”
The name was jarring. The photo even more so—a perky ponytail, too-white teeth, and the school logo on her shirt. Jason’s new teacher.
I sat down hard on the stairs. Legs gone. Breath thin.
Seriously? Her?
And the audacity—to save her photo in his contacts like a trophy.
I stared at the bathroom door. My fingers hovered over the phone, itching to unlock it. But that wasn’t me. I wasn’t the screaming, hair-pulling, door-kicking type. I was the find-out-the-truth-in-a-clean-and-controlled-way type.
So, I did what any irrationally rational woman would do: I called Lana.
Our usual Friday café had become my sanctuary. I pushed my cappuccino around with a spoon, the foam long gone flat.
“He’s always ‘working late’ now,” I murmured.
Lana, ever the fierce one, narrowed her eyes. “Every Friday?”
I nodded. “School duty, he says. Clubs. Supervising.”
“And Jessie?” she prompted.
I dropped my voice. “She called him while he was in the bathroom. Her photo came up.”
Lana didn’t gasp. She slapped the table. “Girl, that’s not a red flag. That’s a five-alarm fire!”
I shrugged helplessly. “What am I supposed to do?”
Lana leaned in, eyes sparkling with mischief. “You clean.”
“Excuse me?”
“One of our janitors bailed. The school needs coverage. I send someone new. You.”
I blinked. “You want me to mop floors in disguise?”
She grinned. “I’ve got a wig. A badge. Orthopedic shoes. No one will suspect a thing. Just think of it as… espionage with bleach.”
The next morning, I was in Lana’s hallway, adjusting a curly red wig and oversized navy shirt with “Kacey” pinned to the chest. I looked like a sitcom janitor from 1986.
“You sure no one will recognize me?” I asked, tugging the wig lower.
“Honey,” she said, handing me a mop, “you look like a human caution sign.”
The school security guard barely blinked as I slipped in. “New?” he grunted. I nodded. “Don’t use the staff microwave,” he warned. “Smells like old tuna.”
My nerves buzzed louder than the fluorescent lights.
The day dragged on. No Daniel. No Jessie. Just squeaky shoes and lunchroom smells.
Then, the final bell rang.
I saw Jason, munching an apple, heading down the hall. He looked happy. Safe.
Then I saw Daniel.
He was heading toward Jessie’s classroom.
My hands gripped the mop handle tighter.
The door creaked open.
Jessie’s voice floated out. “Yeah, yeah… tonight, same as always?”
My heart collapsed. That was it. Confirmation.
Then—
“Dad?”
Jason.
He slipped into the room, murmuring about a pencil case.
And then… he looked at me.
The mop slipped from my grip. It hit my wig. The wig hit the floor.
Jason’s eyes widened. “Mom?!”
Dead. I was dead.
Daniel blinked at me, stunned. “Sweetheart?”
I smiled. “Just came to pick up Jason.”
“You look… weird.”
“I’m coming too,” Daniel said.
I turned, collected myself. “No. Stay where you planned to spend your evening.”
And I left.
Tears came once the door closed behind us.
At home, I was already packing Daniel’s suitcase, rage simmering under every folded sock and ironic “Best Husband Ever” T-shirt. Jason was parked in front of cartoons with a pancake.
Then the doorbell rang.
A girl. Ten, maybe eleven. Neat braids. Backpack.
“Hi!” she chirped. “I came with my dad.”
Daniel stood behind her, sheepish.
“She’s my daughter,” he said.
Silence.
Her eyes looked like his. Soft. Familiar.
Jason peeked around the corner.
“What’s going on?”
“You’ve got a guest,” I told him. “Be polite. Cartoons are serious business.”
Once they were gone, I faced Daniel.
“You should’ve told me.”
“I know,” he whispered. “Jessie and I were together before you. She vanished. I didn’t even know about Sofia until recently.”
I stared. “And now?”
“She just wants Sofia to have a father. That’s it.”
I breathed. Slowly.
“Everyone has a past,” I said. “But if she’s part of your future—Jason deserves to know his sister. Not stumble into it with wigs and mops.”
Daniel nodded, eyes glassy. “You’re right.”
I turned to head into the kitchen. “The kids need milk.”
He pointed to the suitcase. “And this?”
I glanced back. “You’re carrying it. For once, do something on your own.”
Because love might survive secrets—but only if truth comes clean.