It started the night my wife came home just after midnight carrying the scent of a man I didn’t recognize.
Not whiskey. Not cigarettes. Not the faint perfume of a crowded room. It was men’s cologne—deep, expensive, edged with cedar and spice. It clung to her coat, her hair, even the scarf around her neck. I noticed it the moment she stepped through the front door of our house in Arlington, Virginia, heels in one hand, phone in the other, moving quietly like she didn’t want to wake anyone.
I was still sitting at the kitchen island, pretending to review invoices on my laptop.
She paused for half a second when she saw me.
“You’re up?”
I closed the laptop slowly. “Long night?”
