I drove him to the airport, and everything felt completely normal—until my five-year-old son tugged my sleeve and whispered, “Mom… you should watch Dad.” My chest tightened.

I stayed parked, eyes fixed on the terminal doors. Minutes later, instead of heading toward security, he walked back outside and climbed into a taxi. I followed. When the cab stopped, what I saw made my blood run cold.

My husband, Lucas Bennett, bent down to kiss our son Evan on the forehead, then brushed a soft kiss across my cheek. He smelled like his usual cologne—familiar, comforting.
“I’ll be back Friday night,” he said, adjusting his bag. “Conference in Seattle. Nothing exciting.”

I smiled, teased him about missing my cooking. Everything felt ordinary. Almost too ordinary.

I dropped him off like I always did. Sunlight glinted off the glass walls, travelers rushing past. Lucas thanked me, squeezed my hand, and disappeared inside without looking back.

As I reached for the ignition, Evan leaned forward in his seat, voice barely audible.
“Mom… you should watch Dad.”

I turned, startled. “What do you mean, honey?”

He shrugged, eyes still on the doors. “I don’t know. Just… watch him.”

Kids say strange things. I knew that. But his tone—serious, quiet—made my stomach twist. I told him to stay buckled. I didn’t drive away.

I watched the doors.

A few minutes later, Lucas came back out.

My heart jumped—maybe he’d forgotten something. But instead of returning inside, he scanned the curb and got into a yellow taxi.

My hands started shaking.

Without thinking, I pulled out and followed at a distance. The cab didn’t head home. It crossed town, farther from the airport, farther from anything that made sense.

After about twenty minutes, it stopped in front of a modest house with blue shutters, a tidy lawn, and a small bicycle tipped over near the driveway.

Lucas stepped out.

The front door opened.

A young blonde woman stood there, and beside her was a little girl—maybe three years old.

The child ran straight into my husband’s arms.

Lucas scooped her up, laughing, kissing her hair like it was the most natural thing in the world.

That was the moment everything inside me froze.

I parked across the street, gripping the steering wheel until my fingers ached. Evan sat quietly in the back, sensing something was wrong. I prayed he couldn’t see clearly.