I told myself it was nothing. Weddings do strange things to people—nerves, emotions, random thoughts you can’t explain. But that woman’s voice lingered long after the music faded and the guests left: “Check the bottom drawer…” It wasn’t gossip or jealousy—it was certainty. And that certainty made it impossible to ignore as I lay beside Richard that night, staring into the dark.
When his breathing finally evened out, I slipped quietly from the bedroom. The house felt unfamiliar at night—larger, quieter, almost sinister. Every step echoed as I reached his study. The door creaked when I opened it, and for a second, I almost turned back. I didn’t. I crouched and pulled open the bottom drawer.
Inside were neatly stacked envelopes, files, photographs—all obsessively organized. Names, dates, faces… some familiar, some strangers. And then I saw it: a file with my name on it. My past, my finances, my children, moments I had never shared—all documented with unnerving precision. This wasn’t chance. This was deliberate. I realized with a cold shock that I hadn’t just met him; I had been chosen, studied, prepared for.
I closed the drawer slowly, my mind racing. Upstairs, the house looked unchanged, but I knew it never would be the same for me. The wedding, the promises, the future I had imagined—they felt like illusions. Once you see something like that, you can’t unsee it. The warning wasn’t about the past… it was about the life I had just stepped into.
