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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 2

I was awake at 4:03 a.m.

I know because I checked my phone, and then I lay there for another twelve minutes staring at the ceiling, listening to Ethan breathe beside me. Slow and even. Completely unbothered. I watched the shadows on the ceiling and thought about the receipt, and then I made myself stop thinking about the receipt, and then I got up.

The kitchen was cold. I didn't turn on the overhead light — just the small one above the stove, the one that makes everything look amber and soft. I pulled out the mixing bowl. Flour, baking powder, salt. I cracked two eggs and watched them slide into the well I'd made in the center. There's a rhythm to making pancakes that I've had for years now, muscle memory, and I let my hands do the work while my brain stayed somewhere quiet and blank.

Thick ones. The kind with a little vanilla in the batter, cooked slow so the centers stay soft. The kind I'd learned to make in the first year of our marriage, when Ethan had mentioned once — just once, casually, the way you mention you like a song on the radio — that his mother used to make them on Saturday mornings. I'd practiced three weekends in a row until I got them right. He'd eaten six that first time and kissed me on the temple and said I was dangerous.

I got out the good plates. The ones we save for when people come over. I set the table properly — placemats, cloth napkins, the small ceramic pitcher I fill with maple syrup. I poured coffee into both mugs before it finished brewing because I always do that, I'm always too impatient. I cut the butter into a small dish.

By the time Ethan came downstairs, the kitchen smelled like Sunday.

He was already in his work clothes. Jacket over one arm, phone in hand, the particular forward lean of a man who has already mentally left the building. He glanced at the table — really just a flicker of his eyes across it — and something crossed his face so quickly I almost missed it.

"I've got an early call," he said. "I'll grab something on the way."

He reached for his jacket lapel, straightening it.

"I made the ones you like," I said.

My voice came out even. Neutral. I was proud of that.

He stopped. He turned back, and for just a second — one single second — there was something in his expression that I couldn't name. It moved through his eyes like a cloud shadow moving over water. Gone before I could read it. Guilt, maybe. Or impatience. Or something worse than either of those, something that looked like the effort of a person trying to feel something they no longer feel.

"I'll eat when I get home tonight," he said. He crossed the kitchen and pressed his lips to my forehead. A quick, dry press. The kind you give a doorframe on your way out. "Don't wait up if it runs late."

And then he was gone. The front door clicked shut. I heard the elevator in the hallway, the distant chime of it arriving, and then nothing.

I sat down at the table.

The two mugs of coffee were steaming. The maple syrup was in its little pitcher. The pancakes were stacked in the center of the table, still warm, and the empty chair across from me was just a chair.

I picked up my fork.

I ate slowly. I made myself eat slowly, cutting each piece small, chewing, setting the fork down between bites. Because I understood something clearly in that moment: once the plate was empty, I would have to stand up. I would have to wash the dishes. I would have to get dressed and move through the day, and the day would be long and ordinary and full of small moments where I would have to decide, over and over, what I actually knew versus what I was only afraid of.

So I kept eating.

And somewhere between the second and third pancake, I was back in a different kitchen.

Five years ago. The apartment we had before this one, the one with the radiator that clanged all winter and the window that stuck. Ethan had a 7 a.m. meeting — I remembered because he'd been anxious about it for days, a new client, a lot riding on it. He'd come downstairs in his suit, already running behind, and I'd had pancakes on the table because it was Saturday and that's what we did on Saturdays.

He'd looked at the clock. Looked at the table. Looked at me.

And then he sat down.

He ate the whole plate. Every single one. He was checking his phone between bites, yes, and he was already half in his head about the meeting, but he sat there and he ate them because I had made them and he was not going to waste what I made. When he finally stood up, he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand — this ridiculous, boyish gesture — and he said, "If I bomb this pitch, it's your fault for making me late."

I'd laughed. He'd kissed me properly, both hands on my face, the way he used to.

He didn't bomb the pitch.

Sitting at the table this morning, I turned that memory over carefully, the way you turn over something you found in a coat pocket — something you forgot was there. And I understood, maybe for the first time with any real clarity, what I was actually grieving.

It wasn't that he hadn't stayed for breakfast.

It was that the man who would have stayed — who would have been late to his own meeting rather than let the pancakes go cold — that man was already gone. Had been gone for a while, probably. And I had been setting the table for him anyway, lighting candles and changing into the blue shirt and making the ones he liked, as if the right combination of small gestures might eventually open a door that I was only just beginning to understand had been closed.

I wasn't missing Ethan.

I was missing someone who no longer existed.

The realization didn't arrive like a blow. It arrived quietly, the way water finds a crack — slow, patient, certain.

I finished the last pancake. I set down my fork.

I carried the plates to the sink and ran the water and started washing up, and the apartment was very quiet around me, and I was in the middle of thinking about nothing in particular when my phone buzzed on the counter.

My heart did something involuntary. A small, stupid lift.

I dried my hands and picked it up.

Ethan.

I opened the message.

*Help me pick up the gray dry-cleaned suit — need it for next week.*

I read it once. Then again.

No *good morning*. No mention of the breakfast. No *sorry I had to run* or *those smelled amazing* or any of the hundred small things a person says when they know they've left something behind.

Just the suit. Just the errand.

I stood at the kitchen sink with the water still running and I looked at that message for a long time. Long enough that the screen went dark and I had to wake it up again to keep looking.

Then I typed one word.

*Sure.*

I hit send. I set the phone face-down on the counter.

I went back to washing the dishes.

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