The Matcha Scent of His Betrayal

The Matcha Scent of His Betrayal

Gavin

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My ten-year marriage was a transactional lie, built on an astrologer's prophecy that my chart would ensure my husband's success. But on my birthday, he abandoned me to take his young intern, Anais, to the sci-fi festival I' d dreamed of for years. He came home smelling of her sweet matcha perfume, a green hair tie and a festival souvenir tucked in his pocket. He called me dramatic, said she was "fragile" and needed him. At our anniversary gala, meant to be his grand apology, I watched him kiss her passionately on the terrace during the fireworks display. He was still whispering promises in my ear, completely oblivious. That night, I left him the divorce papers and my wedding ring. But he tracked me down on my solo trip to Utah, finding me with my new guide, Casey. He punched Casey, then accused me of cheating. "You belong to me!" he roared. Just then, his phone rang. It was a video call from a hysterical Anais. "Howard, I'm pregnant! My parents are furious! They're demanding we get married immediately!"

Chapter 1

My ten-year marriage was a transactional lie, built on an astrologer's prophecy that my chart would ensure my husband's success. But on my birthday, he abandoned me to take his young intern, Anais, to the sci-fi festival I' d dreamed of for years.

He came home smelling of her sweet matcha perfume, a green hair tie and a festival souvenir tucked in his pocket. He called me dramatic, said she was "fragile" and needed him.

At our anniversary gala, meant to be his grand apology, I watched him kiss her passionately on the terrace during the fireworks display. He was still whispering promises in my ear, completely oblivious.

That night, I left him the divorce papers and my wedding ring.

But he tracked me down on my solo trip to Utah, finding me with my new guide, Casey. He punched Casey, then accused me of cheating. "You belong to me!" he roared.

Just then, his phone rang. It was a video call from a hysterical Anais.

"Howard, I'm pregnant! My parents are furious! They're demanding we get married immediately!"

Chapter 1

Kacey Stanley POV:

The day I finally understood my ten-year marriage was a transactional lie didn't begin with a scream. It started with a scent. The lingering sweet matcha of another woman on my husband' s expensive suit.

Howard Leach, the ambitious tech CEO, my husband, was late. Again. It was my birthday. Not that it mattered anymore. He' d promised for weeks we' d finally go to the niche sci-fi film festival I' d talked about since college. A promise as empty as our bed most nights. But this year, it was worse.

He walked in, his tie loosened, a faint smirk playing on his lips. "Rough day at the office, babe," he mumbled, tossing his jacket onto a chair. Anais Nichols, his new intern, had been crying again. He'd rushed out, leaving me alone with our untouched dinner. He said she was "fragile." I wondered what fragile meant in his dictionary.

I picked up his jacket. The matcha scent hit me first, sickly sweet and cloying. Then, tucked into the breast pocket, a small, vibrant green hair tie. It wasn' t mine. My hair was dark, my ties black. Anais, I knew, loved matcha lattes and wore bright green accessories. A wave of nausea rolled over me.

"Howard," I said, my voice flat, "did you take Anais to the film festival?"

He paused, mid-button, his eyes flicking to the jacket. "Oh, that? She was really upset, Kacey. Overwhelmed with work, you know. I thought a distraction might help. And she mentioned she likes sci-fi." He shrugged, as if explaining why he bought the wrong brand of coffee. "It was just a few hours. Nothing."

My stomach churned. Nothing. That was his word for everything that mattered to me. My passions, my time, my heart.

"You left me on my birthday," I stated, not asking.

He sighed, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "Kacey, don't be dramatic. We can go next weekend. I even brought you something." He gestured to the kitchen counter. A small, neatly wrapped box sat there, beside a takeout container of... matcha-flavored mochi. My throat tightened. He knew I hated matcha. He always had.

"Matcha mochi, Howard?" My voice was barely a whisper. "You know I despise matcha. Anais loves it."

He clicked his tongue, a familiar sign of his growing irritation. "It's a new place down the street. Everyone's raving about it. I just thought... maybe you'd try something new." He picked up the box, pushing it toward me. "Happy birthday, Kacey. Now, are we going to make a big deal out of this, or are we going to be reasonable?"

Reasonable. His code for 'shut up and accept my bullshit.'

I looked at the mochi, then at the green hair tie still clutched in my hand. "Howard," I said, my voice gaining an unnerving calm, "this isn't about mochi. This is about you. Again."

He threw his hands up. "What is it now? You're upset because Anais had a rough day? She's so young, so naive. She really looks up to me, Kacey. I can't just abandon her."

"Abandon her?" The words tasted like ash. "You abandon me, Howard. Every single day. But God forbid your little intern feels a moment of discomfort."

His eyes narrowed. "Don't be jealous, Kacey. It's not a good look. She's just a kid. I'm helping her. You should be more understanding. More... magnanimous."

Magnanimous. The word hung in the air, heavy with his condescension. My mind drifted back to a decade ago, to the spiritual advisor's prophecy. "Her astrological chart is a perfect match to ensure his company's success." Not "her heart," not "her intellect," but "her chart." And now, Anais had the exact same charts, twelve years younger. I was replaceable. I always had been.

A strange, quiet strength began to unfurl within me. "You know what, Howard?" I met his gaze, my eyes dry. "Maybe I should be magnanimous. Maybe I should just make room for her."

His jaw dropped. "What are you talking about?" he blustered, his face a mask of confusion and a flicker of panic. "Don't be absurd."

"Your mother wants grandchildren, doesn't she?" I continued, my voice flat. "And Anais is twelve years younger. With a matching chart. Think of the boundless potential for your empire, Howard. No need to settle for an older model with expired luck."

His face flushed crimson. "Kacey, that's enough!" He stepped towards me, his hand reaching for my arm. "Don't be ridiculous. Let's just... talk this out. You're my wife." He tried to pull me closer, a familiar attempt to smooth things over with a touch, a kiss. It always worked before.

But not tonight. I sidestepped him, the scent of matcha and another woman clinging to him too strongly. My skin crawled.

He stumbled, surprised by my evasion. "Kacey!" he roared, frustrated. He grabbed my wrist, hard. "Stop this nonsense."

My hand, still holding the green hair tie, flew out. It slipped from my grasp, falling to the polished marble floor with a soft clink. Beside it, a small, silver token. A miniature spaceship. The limited edition collectible given out at the sci-fi festival's VIP screening. The one I' d wanted for years.

His grip loosened, his eyes falling to the token. A flicker of guilt, quickly replaced by indignation, crossed his face. "It's just a souvenir. I was going to give it to you."

"A souvenir you just happened to pick up at a festival you took your intern to, on my birthday, after abandoning me," I finished for him. My voice was calm, too calm. The kind of calm before a storm.

"Kacey, don't be like this. I can buy you a dozen of those. A private screening. Anything you want. Just..." He trailed off, his phone buzzing insistently in his pocket. He glanced at the screen, and his face visibly paled. Anais.

He stammered, "I... I have to take this. Important client issue. I'll be back. We'll talk." He made a move towards the door, fumbling for his keys.

"Don't worry about it, Howard," I said, a strange sense of lightness filling me. "I think we've said all there is to say."

He shot me a bewildered look as he rushed out, still trying to answer the call, still trying to orchestrate his lies. The door slammed shut behind him.

A few minutes later, my phone buzzed. A notification from Anais Nichols's Instagram. A selfie. Her laughing face, nestled against Howard's shoulder. In the background, the glowing neon sign of the sci-fi film festival. The caption read: "Best. Birthday. Ever. Thanks to the most amazing mentor a girl could ask for! #Blessed #LuckyCharm"

Lucky charm. The same words the spiritual advisor had used for me, ten years ago.

A profound calm settled over me. There was no pain, no tears. Just a quiet, resolute clarity. It was over. All of it. The lie, the pretense, the decade of sacrificing myself for a man who saw me as nothing more than an astrological prop.

I walked to our bedroom, pulling out a dusty duffel bag from the back of the closet. My fingers brushed against the old coding trophies, the climbing gear I hadn't touched in years. A smile, small and genuine, touched my lips.

It was time to reclaim myself.

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