"You're with her?"
"She makes me feel alive again," he said, like he was auditioning for a breakup monologue.
Alive?
"We have six kids, Cole. What do you think this is, a coma?"
"You wouldn't understand," he said. "You don't see yourself anymore. You used to care about how you looked. How we looked."
I stared.
He kept going. "When was the last time you even put on real clothes? Or wore something that wasn't stained?"
"You don't see yourself anymore."
My breath hitched. "So that's it? You're bored? You found someone with better leggings and tighter abs, and suddenly the last sixteen years are, what? A mistake?"
"You've let yourself go," he said flatly.
That landed like a slap.
I blinked, slow and furious. "You know what I've let go of? Sleep. Privacy. Hot meals. Myself. I let myself go so you could chase promotions and sleep in on Saturdays while I kept our house and kids from catching on fire."
He rolled his eyes.
"You always do this."
"Do what?" I snapped.