Cuckold | -5-

Now, on the fifth, he didn’t even hide. He sat in the living room, reading a book upside down, while she texted Mark under the table. Her thumb moved in small, confident circles. Once, she glanced up and smiled—not cruelly, but kindly. The kind of smile you give a child who doesn’t understand the grown-up joke.

He wanted to say: I have become the furniture of your betrayal. I am the chair you sit on while thinking of him. I am the mirror that watches you dress for him. I am the fifth in a series of humiliations that now have their own gravity. Cuckold -5-

He turned off the light. In the dark, her breathing was soft, innocent, terrible. He reached for her hand. She gave it, even in sleep. That was the real cage—not the betrayal, but the tenderness that survived it. Now, on the fifth, he didn’t even hide

He remembered the first time he watched. Not in person—God, no. Through a crack in the door, trembling, ashamed of his own pulse. She had laughed with the other man in a low, smoky way she never laughed with him. That laugh was a key turning in a lock he didn’t know he had. Once, she glanced up and smiled—not cruelly, but kindly

He looked at the marmalade. Orange, glistening, cruel.

She wasn’t taunting. That was the worst part. Her voice was soft, almost clinical. She had folded the affair into routine the way one folds a letter into an envelope—neat, irreversible, already sent. The first cuckolding had been a storm. The second, a drizzle. By the fifth, it was weather.