"Well," said Jane into the phone, resigned but angry. "I wasn't crazy."
"Oh no," said Lena, slipping into an empty meeting room.
"And now I think I might actually go crazy."
"Tell me what happened?"
Jane sighed and willed herself to start the story of her morning. The morning she confirmed what she already knew. It took a moment, as if speaking it aloud would let lose all of the churning emotion in her body. She'd been coiled like a spring for months and she wasn't sure if she wanted to let go of it just yet. She wasn't sure what she might do if she did. But after a few seconds, the words came.
"So... I got Chloe off to school. Breakfast, lunch, and because they she was running late like always, I drove her down to the bus. He'd already left - for 'work' - at, oh, 7am. Early start, apparently. So my suspicions were already raised, because it wasn't the first time he'd left early like that. And I got back home from the bus and just thought, I have to know. After finding those texts, you know? They weren't normal friendly banter like he'd been saying. And they went back so far."
"Yeah," said Lena, hanging on every word.
"So I stood in the living room for about five seconds, turned around, picked up the car keys and drove straight back out - to her place."
"Mm."
"Sure enough, his car was there. I parked a little way down the street and checked the coast was clear before getting out. It was really like being in a spy movie, stalking him to her place and trying to bust them without being caught."
"You really went up to the house?!"
"Yes. I had to see for myself. So I crept around to the back of the house, where her bedroom is - she and I had laughed so much in that bedroom, and I'd hugged her while she cried for her failed marriage in that bedroom, and I knew I was going to see the end of my marriage and the end of a friendship in that bedroom - and I knew I would have to walk away, whatever I saw, and not go in there because I might actually kill them."
"Oh my God, Jane."
"I heard them before I could see them. Both of them. When people cheat in movies it's always the woman moaning and thrashing, but he was grunting just as loudly as her. The window was open, and the curtain slightly open, and I peeked around the frame, and..."
She broke off for a few seconds.
"What really surprised me was how much I could see. For some reason, I thought they'd be under the covers - like he and I always had sex - and I wouldn't really be able to see anything except their heads bobbing. But she was right up on top of the bed on all fours, that small, tight body I used to envy so much, completely naked, her little tits swaying as he slammed into her from behind. I could see him going in and out of her. I could see his hands digging into the skin of her waist. I could see her reaching down between her legs to get herself off. Just... everything."
Lena didn't know what to say. She felt a little flushed, truth be told, and had to steady herself with a hand on a chair. The way Jane described it, her husband and her best friend were having the best sex anyone had ever had. And that - combined with the idea of Jane watching in open-mouthed shock - quite turned Lena on.
"I should have walked away. I mean, I'd seen it, right? But for some reason, I kept watching. They were facing away from me, and I wasn't that worried about being caught any more, so I just stayed. I saw her lose it when she came, and I saw him pull out of her and whip her around so he could come on her stomach. Like in porn movies. Just ridiculous."
"Jesus."
"That was when I left. Back to the car, and back home. Then I called you."
They were silent for a bit.
"Do you want me to come over?" said Lena. "I could say I'm sick and come hang out."
"Um..." Jane thought for a second. "That would actually be great. Can you? I hope it doesn't look suspicious, both of us being off sick."
"It'll be fine. I'll be there in half an hour."
"Oh, thanks, Lena. You're so good to me."
"Just don't go back there and kill them."
Jane laughed bitterly. "Okay, I promise."
After they hung up, Lena - still tense - went to the toilet. She'd become a little wet. A thought - an urge - crossed her mind, which she quickly disregarded. Not now, she thought.
*
Lena wasn't sure what to expect when she opened the door. She tried to affix a neutral expression as she knocked, but she couldn't help widening her eyes a little and taking a couple of shorter breaths as the door opened.
Not surprisingly, Jane looked terrible. For her, anyway. Her dark brown hair was clean and tied back, but her usually smooth face was crinkled from too much stress and not enough sleep. The brightness in her eyes was dimmer than ever. She'd been away from work all week, and she'd obviously spent it brooding on her cheating husband.
Still, she gave Lena a quick, instinctive smile and embraced her tightly. In seconds, she was weeping.
"Hey," said Lena, patting Jane's back. "It's okay, it's okay."
Jane tried to say something but just sobbed instead.
"Let it out, hon." She held her and let her cry into her shoulder. Their hug was a little ungainly, Jane being half a foot taller, but she was clearly getting the catharsis she needed. "You must be so done right now."
"My life is ruined," Jane managed.
"I..." Lena hesitated. She thought back to her own crushing moment of realisation, finding Kyle's emails to that woman after he'd left his Gmail open, reading in horror about all the things he was going to do to her. She thought of how awful the separation had been, and how much help she'd had to call in to keep Wanda - three years old at the time - fed, clothed, and happy. She thought about how much harder all this was than it could've been, all because her partner decided his gym buddy had better vital statistics than Lena did.
"Yeah, you're right," she eventually said. "It is ruined."
Jane laughed gently into her shoulder.
"But you will get through it."
After a few more seconds, Jane finally released Lena, her face a mess of tears. She'd left a big wet patch on Lena's blouse, and even managed to darken a clump of her stray hair from blonde to light brown.
"Sorry," said Jane, dabbing pointlessly at Lena's shoulder with her bare hand. "Come in, I've brewed coffee. Are you picking Wanda up from school?"
"Yeah, about three thirty. Plenty of time."
In the living room, Jane gestured to a seat at the dining table. She'd stacked several days of newspapers and junk mail on one side of the dining table so they had room to put down their mugs. Chloe's toys were strewn across the room, including that castle Wanda had enthused about on the way home after the last time she'd visited. Must organise another playdate, thought Lena.
"Sorry it's a mess," said Jane.
"Don't worry about it. I'm guessing Tom isn't bothering to clean up either."
Jane grimaced. "God, I knew it, I just knew it. He checked out months ago. Less and less time at home, less talking to me, definitely no interest in maintaining our home." She looked like she might cry some more, but then she steeled herself. "Fucking asshole."