Marina’s fork paused mid-air.
Julian coughed. “Bella, what are you—”
“Oh, don’t interrupt,” I said gently, still smiling. “I’m just curious. I heard you two chatting yesterday.”
Marina’s face went pale.
Julian stared at me like I’d grown a second head.
“I was outside,” I continued calmly. “Collecting towels. You were discussing text messages. And coffee dates. And how I ‘never notice anything.’”
Marina’s lips trembled. “I… I didn’t mean—”
Julian jumped in. “It’s not what it sounds like.”
I let out a soft laugh. “It’s exactly what it sounds like.”
Neither of them touched their food.
“I won’t scream,” I said. “I won’t throw plates. I won’t beg. But I will ask you both one question.”
I looked at Marina first.
“Did you know he was married?”
Tears welled in her eyes. “He said… he said you two were basically roommates.”
Julian’s head snapped toward her. “Marina—”
Then I turned to him.
“And you? Were you planning to tell me before or after you embarrassed me in my own neighborhood?”
He had no answer.
The truth doesn’t need shouting. It just needs space.
“I invited you here,” I said calmly, “so there would be no confusion. No secrets. No sneaking around fences.”
I stood up.
“This brunch is over. Marina, you’re young. Make better choices. And Julian…”
I slid my wedding ring off slowly and placed it on the table between us.
“…you’ll need to find somewhere else to have your coffee dates.”
For the first time since yesterday, his composure cracked.
But I didn’t cry.
Because sometimes the most powerful revenge isn’t chaos.
It’s clarity.
And I had never felt clearer in my life.