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The Day My Husband Said He Was Impotent Novel Cover

The Day My Husband Said He Was Impotent

On their third anniversary, a wife’s world collapses when her husband admits to being impotent. The sudden confession feels wrong, and she soon detects glaring holes in his narrative. Driven by rising suspicion, she investigates his life and discovers a calculated web of deception. Her husband’s alleged condition is nothing more than a mask for deeper secrets. Now, she must navigate a path of betrayal and lies to find the dark truth about their marriage.
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Chapter 1

I heard the front door open at 6:47 p.m.

I know the exact time because I'd been watching the clock above the stove, timing the pasta so it wouldn't go soft. Three days. Ethan had been gone three days, and I'd spent the last hour doing the small, stupid things I always do before he comes home — lighting the candle on the kitchen counter, changing into the blue shirt he once said made my eyes look warmer, checking that the apartment smelled like something other than just me.

I dried my hands on the dish towel and walked out to the entryway.

He was setting his roller bag against the wall, his back to me. Still in his work clothes — the gray blazer, the dark trousers. His shoulders looked tight.

"Hey," I said.

"Hey." He didn't turn around right away. He crouched down to unzip the front pocket of his bag, pulled out his laptop charger, straightened up.

Then he looked at me. He smiled. It was a real smile, I think. Or it looked real. After seven years, I know every version of Ethan's smile, and this one landed somewhere between tired and relieved, which made sense. He'd had a long week. We both had.

What didn't happen: he didn't cross the room and pull me in from behind the way he used to. He didn't press his face into my neck and say something dumb about missing my cooking. He just carried the charger toward the bedroom and said, "Smells good. Give me ten minutes."

I went back to the pasta.

Ten minutes became twenty. By the time he came to the table, I'd already plated everything and poured the wine. He sat down, picked up his fork, and his phone was face-up beside his bowl.

I told him about the leak in the bathroom ceiling that the building super had finally come to look at. He said, "Mm."

I told him my sister called and was thinking about coming to visit in October. He said, "That's good."

I told him I'd found a gray hair — my first — and I'd stood in the bathroom mirror for ten full minutes debating whether to pull it. He said, "Mm-hm," and typed something with his thumb.

Three things. He let three things go by like I was a radio playing in another room.

I drank my wine and watched him and told myself he was tired. People get tired. Business trips are exhausting. The pasta was good, actually — better than usual — and I focused on that.

After dinner, he settled on the couch with his laptop. I cleaned up the kitchen, slow and quiet, and I thought about how the apartment felt different with him in it. Fuller. Even when he was silent, even when he was distracted, there was a weight to his presence that I'd grown so used to I only noticed it when he was gone.

I still loved him. I want to be clear about that. Whatever came after, that part was still completely true.

I walked up behind him on the couch. I slid my arms around his shoulders from behind, my chin resting near his ear, and I said it soft, the way I always did.

"I missed you."

Those three words. Our signal. Our shorthand for everything else that came with them.

Ethan went still.

Not the kind of still that means he's savoring something. The kind of still that means a person has just made a decision.

He closed the laptop. He turned, shifting so he was facing me, and he looked at me with an expression I didn't have a name for yet. Careful. Measured. Like he'd been rehearsing.

"Addie." He paused. "I need to tell you something."

My hands dropped from his shoulders.

"I've been — " He stopped, started again. "Lately, I haven't been able to... I can't get hard."

The sentence just sat there between us.

I stared at him. My brain did something strange — it skipped the obvious question entirely and landed somewhere else.

"How do you know?" I asked.

It came out before I could think about what it meant to ask it. The words just fell out of my mouth, automatic, the way your hand pulls back from a hot pan before your brain tells it to.

Ethan blinked. A beat of silence — just one — and then he said, "I just wanted you to know."

I looked at his face. He looked back at mine.

"It's probably just stress," I said. My voice was steady. I was proud of how steady it was. "You've been working insane hours. Your body's just — it catches up with you."

I smiled at him. Then I turned and started carrying the wine glasses back to the kitchen.

I rinsed them at the sink with my back to the room. The water was too hot but I didn't adjust it. I listened to him get up from the couch, heard the familiar sound of him moving through the apartment, heard the bathroom door close and the shower start.

I stood at the sink and I let myself think the thing I hadn't let myself think while I was looking at him.

A man who can't get hard doesn't announce it. I know this the way I know other quiet, practical truths about people — the way I know that someone who's truly sorry doesn't explain why they did it first. A man who's struggling with his body retreats. He gets awkward. He pretends to be asleep. He doesn't sit his wife down and make a statement about it with that careful, rehearsed look in his eyes.

Unless the statement isn't really about that.

Unless the statement is about something else — something coming, something that will need explaining — and he's just laying the first brick of a wall he hasn't finished building yet.

I dried my hands.

I walked to the bedroom. His gray blazer was slung over the chair in the corner, the way he always drops it. I picked it up to hang it in the closet, and my fingers ran over the inner breast pocket out of habit.

There was something inside. Something small and stiff.

I reached in and pulled out a folded rectangle of paper.

A receipt.

I unfolded it under the lamp on the nightstand. The Lyle Hotel. I knew the name — boutique place, nice bar, the kind of hotel that costs enough to feel like an occasion. The date was printed clearly at the top: Tuesday. The second night of his trip.

Line items: dinner for two. One night, standard king room.

I stood in the middle of the bedroom and listened to the water running in the shower and listened to my own heartbeat, which was very loud and very even, like a metronome that didn't know yet what song it was keeping time for.

I folded the receipt back along its original creases. I put it back in the pocket. I hung the blazer in the closet.

Then I walked to the bathroom mirror — the small one in the hallway, not the big one in the en suite where he was showering — and I looked at myself.

I practiced a smile.

Not the one I use when I'm actually happy. The other one. The one that looks like everything is fine.

I did it three times until it felt natural.

By the fourth, I almost believed it myself.

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