Ava’s world shatters when she wakes to her husband’s furious call — her MIL has posted fake photos online, accusing her of cheating. As neighbors turn cold and her marriage teeters, Ava must prove the truth before lies destroy everything. But karma’s watching, and it’s got receipts.
I’d just crawled into bed after an exhausting night shift at the hospital when my phone started vibrating like it had a personal vendetta against my nightstand.
I fumbled for it, squinting at the screen.
Liam. My husband. Why was he calling me when he knew I’d just gotten home?
“Hello?” My voice came out like sandpaper.
“HOW COULD YOU CHEAT ON ME?!”
I shot up in bed so fast I nearly gave myself whiplash.
“What? Liam, what are you talking about?”
“Don’t play dumb with me, Ava! It’s all over Facebook.
My mom posted the photos. You and Mark. I can’t believe you would do this to us.”
My stomach dropped to my toes.
“Mark? Who’s Mark?” I said. “The 65-year-old doctor who works in Orthotics?”
But there was no reply.
Liam had hung up on me.
My hands shook as I opened Facebook. The notifications were endless. Red dots everywhere.
My heart hammered as I scrolled to Eleanor’s post.
There I was, outside our local coffee shop, kissing our handsome and charming former neighbor, Mark.
A man I’d only ever exchanged polite greetings with, and who had moved away six months ago.
Staring at that photo was one of the most surreal experiences of my life. This had never happened, but the photo looked so real…
I called Liam back immediately.
“Liam, I never cheated on you. Those photos are fake!”
“Are you saying my mom made this up?
That’s your explanation?”
That seed of doubt Eleanor had planted was already taking root.
See, my husband grew up in a world where mommy always knew best. Eleanor had been grooming him his whole life to distrust everyone except her.
“I don’t know where she got those photos from, if she made this up or not, but I’m telling you they’re not real!” My voice cracked like I was 13 again.
The silence stretched between us like a chasm.
When he finally spoke, his voice was hollow.
“I need some time to think. I’m staying at Jake’s tonight.”
The line went dead again.
I stared at my phone, watching more comments pile up under Eleanor’s post. Friends from high school, whom I hadn’t spoken to in years, were suddenly experts on my marriage.