My wife fainted in the bathroom, and I hurriedly grabbed my phone to call for help—but what hit my eyes left me even more stunned than her…
My wife had fainted in the bathroom.
The water was still pouring over her, her pale, cold skin making my chest tighten. I hurriedly pulled out my phone, my hands trembling so much I couldn’t even dial. But at that exact moment—just as I was about to call for help—what I saw froze me in place:
A breakup message.
Not sent to me.
The wife I had loved for six years… was suffering over another relationship.
Hương and I met in a soft skills class in District 3. At that time, I was an introverted computer engineer, and she was a lively, clever marketing staff member. On the first day, Hương asked to borrow my pen, smiled lightly, and I froze for a few seconds. She had a smile that made you want to slow down time just to look at it a little longer.
After the course, I invited her for coffee. From those casual coffee meetings, a quiet relationship formed. Not stormy, not dramatic like a K-drama, but as gentle as a late-afternoon jazz tune. Three years later, we got married. Our small 15th-floor apartment became our first home. Sometimes I would wake up in the middle of the night just to see her back turned to me, her black hair spread across the pillow, and my heart filled with a simple, peaceful happiness. I thought—if there is a heaven, it must be something like this.
Married life wasn’t always sweet, but we knew how to love each other in a mature way. She had a temper, I was calm. She loved flowers, I hated them but still put them on the table every last Friday of the month. She loved talking, I loved listening. Once, Hương got stressed over a failed project—I skipped an important meeting just to sit with her all afternoon in a small café, where she could cry freely without explanation.
We weathered the pandemic together. Working from home often led to small clashes, but I never felt our love diminish. Hương was still the woman who made me careful every time I tied my shoes so I wouldn’t keep her waiting. Still the person I wanted to tell my day’s stories to first when I got home.
And then… a few months ago, I started noticing something strange. She smiled less, hugged me more briefly, and her eyes… seemed to be hiding something. I didn’t think much. I trusted my wife.
Last night, she said, “I’ll take a shower first. Don’t play the movie too loud, okay?”
And then I heard a loud thud.
I rushed into the bathroom. She had collapsed on the floor. I shakily opened my phone to call for help.
And the message appeared, because her phone wasn’t locked:
“I’m sorry. But I can’t bear it if you’re not by my side. Break up? Do you know what I’ve lost just to love you?”
I could only read that. The final message came from someone named “Tuan – Anonymous.”
At that moment, it felt like I had been struck by lightning. No, it couldn’t be…
Hương was immediately taken to the hospital. I nearly knelt beside her bed when she woke up. She looked at me with panic in her eyes, then suddenly turned away, trying to hide the tears welling up.
I didn’t ask anything. I just held her hand—still cold from shock—but I knew it wasn’t just the fall in the bathroom; it was the slide of her heart… away from me, away from this marriage.
A few days later, Hương returned home. I cared for her as usual: cooking, laundry, preparing warm water before bed—the things I had done for six years. But this time, between us, there was a thick, invisible wall.
I couldn’t pretend anymore.
That evening, when she put her phone down on the table, I gently asked:
— Hương, you’re in love with someone else, aren’t you?
She flinched. A few seconds of silence, as if weighing millions of possibilities, and finally… she nodded. A slight nod, but it cut like a knife to the heart.
I didn’t get angry. I didn’t cry. I just felt hollow.
— How long? I asked.
— Over seven months. When I moved to the partner company’s project. At first, it was just talking… then somehow…
She fell silent. I didn’t need her to say more. I understood.
— Then why did you stay?
She smiled sadly:
— Because I didn’t have the courage to destroy everything. Because you’re too good. Because… I still love you. But it’s the kind of love that makes me feel guilty every time we face each other.
I smiled, a bitter smile I had never imagined I’d use in my life:
— You love someone else, but still pity me?
— No! — she stood up, eyes red — It’s not pity. I tried to stop. I blocked the number, cut off contact. But every time I saw you still cooking, still making tea for me, still asking about my work… I felt horrible. I don’t deserve to be loved like this.
I turned my face away.
So… my kindness made her feel guilty. And she loved someone else… yet she chose to stay in this house, living with me like a model couple—just because she wasn’t cruel enough to leave.
A few days later, Hương moved to another room. She said she needed time to think. I didn’t stop her. The small house suddenly felt as cold as winter in Hanoi.
A month later, I saw her packing her suitcase. No tears, no confusion. She looked at me one last time:
— I’ll move out for a while. I need to find myself. I’m sorry… truly sorry for betraying you.
I didn’t answer. I just nodded. And I watched the door close behind her, not knowing when—or if—it would ever open again.
After everything…
I tidied the bedroom, put away the wedding photos, the birthday gifts from her, even the little notes stuck all over the fridge in her familiar handwriting:
“Have a nice day, husband!”
“I put the rice in the oven, don’t forget to eat.”
The house was now eerily silent. No more fainting in the bathroom. No strange messages. Only me—and a raw, chilling truth:
Love alone is not enough.
A few weeks later, I received a message from her:
“I’m okay. But I miss the meals with you. No one makes tea like you anymore…”
I didn’t reply. I just quietly deleted it.
Sometimes, love doesn’t die from lack of feeling, but because someone chooses dishonesty when they should have faced the truth.
They say, “If you love someone, forgive them.”
Perhaps that’s true. But forgiveness doesn’t mean forgetting, and it certainly doesn’t mean keeping them in your life at any cost.
My wife wasn’t bad. She was just weak for a moment—but sometimes, just that moment… is enough to destroy a life two people built together.
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