After 22 years of marriage, my husband suddenly started taking the trash out at 3 a.m. He’d never volunteered for it… not once.
So why now? One night, I followed him and what I discovered broke my heart in ways I wasn’t ready for.
I’m Lucy, 47, and I’ve been married to Dave for 22 years. We’ve got two grown kids who pop in for Sunday dinners, but mostly it’s just me and him now with our traditional morning coffee, grocery runs, and soft arguments about thermostat settings.
It was that quiet, cute, and boring kind of love you think is unbreakable… until the bedroom felt eerily quiet that Tuesday night in March.
I rolled over, my hand searching for the familiar warmth of Dave’s body, but I found only cold sheets.
The red numbers on the alarm clock glowed 3:12 a.m.
I sat up, listening. Our house in Maplewood had its own language of creaks and sighs, but it felt different and eerily silent that night.
“Dave?” I whispered into the darkness.
No response came.
I padded downstairs, my bare feet silent on the hardwood. The kitchen stood empty, moonlight streaming through the window above the sink.
There was no glass of water on the counter and no sign he’d been here at all.
The front door’s hinges groaned suddenly and my heart jumped. Dave stepped inside, closing it softly behind him.
“God, you scared me,” I said, wrapping my robe tighter. “Where were you?”
He froze for a moment, then shrugged.
“Just taking the trash out.”
“At three in the morning?”
“Yeah. I couldn’t sleep… figured I’d get it done.” His voice carried that casual tone but his eyes wouldn’t meet mine.
I stared at him in the dim hallway light.
In 22 years of marriage, Dave had never voluntarily taken out the trash, let alone in the middle of the night.
“Since when do you take the trash out at all?”
He gave me a quick smile and disappeared down the hall.
The next morning, I checked under the kitchen sink. The trash can sat empty, the liner crisp and new. My stomach twisted.
He hadn’t been lying about that part.
But something felt wrong. Dave hummed while making coffee, kissed my forehead like always, and asked about my plans for the day. Everything looked normal.
But something kept tugging at me from the inside.
“Sleep okay?” I asked, watching his face.
“Like a baby.” He smiled. “You?”
“Fine.” I took a sip of my coffee, but it tasted like nothing. Just bitter.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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