But the six-digit passcode remained. Whenever his phone buzzed, he angled the screen away from her. It was a tiny, persistent variable that kept Audrey’s internal alarms ringing.
The breaking point arrived on a Tuesday evening.
Simon was upstairs giving Lily a bath, the sound of splashing and laughter echoing down the hallway. Audrey was in the kitchen, gathering Simon's suits to drop off at the dry cleaner the next morning. It was a mundane, domestic chore she had done a hundred times.
She reached into the inner breast pocket of his charcoal blazer—the one he had worn to the gala—to check for stray pensor business cards. Her fingers brushed against a stiff piece of folded paper.
Audrey pulled it out. It was a crisp, itemized receipt from Aurelia Fine Jewelers, a high-end boutique downtown.
The date was from the previous Thursday. The charge was for four thousand dollars.
The item description read: 18k Gold & Emerald Tennis Bracelet.
Audrey stopped breathing. The kitchen seemed to tilt on its axis.
Emerald.
Her mind instantly flashed back to the gala. To Emily. To the sleek, intensely distracting emerald-green slip dress clinging to the younger woman's frame. To the proprietary way Emily had brushed lint off this very jacket.
A four-thousand-dollar piece of jewelry was not a "logistical hiccup." It was not a blurred professional boundary. It was a declaration.
Audrey didn't cry. The analytical, scientific part of her brain took over, flooding her system with icy, terrifying clarity. The hypothesis was confirmed. The data was undeniable.
She placed the receipt flat on the kitchen island. She didn't move as she heard the bathwater drain upstairs. She didn't move as Simon’s footsteps padded down the stairs a few minutes later.
"Hey," Simon said, walking into the kitchen wiping his damp hands on a towel. He was wearing his sweatpants, looking relaxed and happy. "Lily is down. I was thinking we could open that bottle of Caber—"
He stopped. He saw Audrey standing perfectly still, her hands resting flat on the cool marble of the counter. And then he saw the receipt.
The color drained from his face so fast he looked physically ill.
"Audrey," he breathed.
"An emerald bracelet," Audrey said. Her voice didn't shake. It sounded like it belonged to a stranger. "Four thousand dollars. On a Thursday afternoon, while you were supposedly in a budget meeting with David."
Simon took a step forward, his hands raised in a placating gesture. "Audrey, wait. Just let me—"
"Do not," Audrey snapped, the ice finally cracking to reveal blinding, white-hot rage. "Do not stand in our kitchen and insult me again. I saw her in that dress, Simon. Did you buy it to match? Is that what the newly-implemented corporate security passcode is protecting? Photos of her wearing it?"
Simon stared at her, his mouth opening and closing. The panic in his eyes was absolute. But then, strangely, the panic shifted. It melted into a look of profound, crushing defeat.
He didn't argue. He didn't try to gaslight her. He just turned around and walked out of the kitchen.
Audrey braced herself. He was leaving. He was packing a bag. This was the end of a ten-year marriage, happening on a random Tuesday next to the dry cleaning.
But he didn't go to the front door. He walked into his home office down the hall. A moment later, he returned.
In his hand was a small, square box wrapped in heavy, textured navy paper, tied with a silver ribbon.
He walked slowly back to the kitchen island and set the box down right next to the damning receipt. He didn't say a word. He just pushed it toward her.
Audrey looked at the box, her heart hammering a frantic rhythm against her ribs. She felt a sudden, sickening jolt of confusion.
With trembling fingers, she pulled the silver ribbon. It slipped away easily. She lifted the lid of the box.
Resting on a bed of black velvet was an 18k gold tennis bracelet. But it wasn't a flashy, ostentatious piece meant to complement a cocktail dress. It was incredibly delicate, understated, and elegant—exactly Audrey's style. And interspersed between the diamonds weren't just random emeralds.
They were tiny, alternating sapphires and emeralds.