My thanks to Randi. Literotica and my beta readers.
Scott had hoped that he could take good news back to Gemma, his wife of 12 years. That wasn't to be. He also needed to tell his best friend, Tim.
The Oncologist had been as gentle and as kind as he could be, but telling a patient that his cancer, previously thought cured, had now rapidly metastasised to most of his major organs, his prognosis was bleak and no treatment save for palliative care would be possible, is never easy. Scott had six months to live, at best.
He had received his initial diagnosis of cancer two years earlier. He had gone through the agonies of chemo and radiation therapy, His wife Gemma had been his rock as had his best friend, Tim.
Tim had been really good, supporting Gemma as well as Scott, driving them to and from his hospital appointments, helping around the house and doing the yard work when Scott was too weak to cope, helping him run and eventually sell his business.
Scott felt that he owed a great deal to Tim, his best friend since early childhood.
Scott was thinking about how he and Gemma could show their appreciation to Tim as he made his way back from the hospital.
When he arrived at the apartment he shared with Gemma, he found her in the living room. They both started to talk at once. "You first," he said.
"Scott, oh, this is going to be so difficult.
"Scott, I have loved you with all my heart ever since we met, 14 years ago. Although I still love you very, very much indeed, I no longer feel that burning, all-encompassing love that a wife should feel for her husband."
He looked at her, in silence, he felt a lump growing within his chest as he waited for her to continue. He knew what she would be having to say would be bad, but he had no clue as to how bad it was going to become.
"You know that over the past two years, after you were diagnosed and treated for cancer, that Tim was my rock? Well, our rock, really, I suppose I should say? Well, over those two years he helped me with the health insurance paperwork for your private healthcare, the paperwork for selling your business and getting you the best price so you could take early retirement, getting to the pharmacy to get your prescriptions, taking me to visit you in hospital while you were receiving your treatments and a thousand and one other things?
"There were times when I didn't know if, mentally or physically, I could continue, knowing you were in hospital and they gave us a prognosis that wasn't too favourable."
Scott nodded, silently. He was beginning to have a very bad feeling as to how this would progress. His apparent acquiescence emboldened Gemma enough to continue.
"Well, a while ago, Tim and I realised that we were beginning to have loving feelings for each other that were growing and growing. We tried to ignore them, but in the end, we realised that the situation we had found ourselves in could no longer be ignored and that we were now no longer good friends, that we were now in love with each other. Majorly in love with each other."
Scott found his voice, at last. "Did you... have you slept with each other?"
"Oh, no, Scott! Never! No, we would, could never, do that to you! It was bad enough that we were betraying you emotionally, but betraying you physically wasn't something either of us could do, though we were tempted. But we didn't."
"What is it you want, Gemma?"
"I want, no, that's not right, I need a divorce, please, Scott. That's so I can marry Tim, the man I now love with all my being."
"You don't love me anymore?"
"Oh, please don't think that, Scott! There'll always be a special place in my heart for you as the boy who took my virginity and the man I loved with all my heart for 14 years, but I want to spend the next 14 years or more with Tim, the other man who I now love with that burning, passionate love that I used to feel for you. I'm sorry, Scott, I just don't feel that deep, burning passionate love for you, any longer."
Scott sat down.
"Scott, when you came in you wanted to say something. What was it? Was it about your check-up at the hospital? What did they say?"
He shrugged. "Oh, it was something and nothing. It's not relevant to you, so there's no need for you to concern yourself about it."
She nodded, having failed to comprehend the exact nature of his words. Perhaps she had heard what she wanted to hear?
"Oh, that's great, honey! Look, I'm going to go to Tim's house. We are going over to see his mother in the nursing home she lives in to let her know about Tim and me. We'll talk, you, Tim and me, about the practicalities of the divorce later this evening. I have left some papers on the table." She motioned toward a stack of papers. "And..."