I put a la:xa:tive in my husband’s coffee before he went out to see his lover… but what happened next was worse than I imagined.

My husband stood in front of the mirror, fixing his shirt like he was heading out on a date—not to work. Too much cologne, too much excitement… far too much for someone claiming he had “meetings.”

I stood in the kitchen, watching the coffee finish brewing.

In my hand… a small bottle of laxative.

This wasn’t impulsive.

It came after months of silence, phone calls that ended when I walked in, and “urgent meetings” that always seemed to happen on Friday nights.

And most of all… after the message I saw the night before:

“I’ll be waiting for you tomorrow. Don’t forget the perfume I like.”

Signed—Carolina.

The new secretary.

Elegant name. Too elegant.

I took a slow breath.

“And my coffee?” he called from the doorway, adjusting his belt with more energy than he’d shown me in weeks.
I handed it to him.

“A little surprise,” I said, smiling calmly.

I watched him drink.

One sip.
Two.
Three.

He finished it without hesitation.

That stung more than I expected… he hadn’t rushed anything I gave him in a long time.

“So where are you going all dressed up and smelling like that?” I asked, leaning casually against the frame.

“Meeting,” he said, grabbing his keys. “Important one. Strategy… projections… synergy.”

He threw those words around like they meant something.

“Synergy with lace?” I muttered.

But he was already gone.

The door shut.

Silence.

I looked at the clock.

One minute.
Two.
Five.

I sat at the table, waiting.

Ten minutes passed.

And then…

perfect timing.

“DAMN IT!” came a shout from outside.

I smiled.

I stepped onto the porch, wearing my most innocent expression.

There he was—bent over beside the car, clutching his stomach like it was about to betray him at any second.

He stumbled toward the house.

“What did you give me?!” he shouted. “I’m not going to make it to the bathroom!”
I placed a hand on my chest, pretending concern.

“Love… are you nervous?”

He froze, pale.

“Nervous?!”

“They say when you’re anxious about a date… your body reacts.”

“I WON’T MAKE IT!”

He rushed toward the stairs.

“Oh—and don’t even think about using the upstairs bathroom,” I added sweetly.

He stopped mid-step.

“Why not?”

“I’m cleaning it.”

What happened next was unforgettable.

My “corporate genius” husband, full of big words like “synergy,” scrambling upstairs with zero dignity left, his “important meeting” clearly canceled.

The bathroom door slammed.

The sounds that followed… dramatic, to say the least.

I sighed.

Then I picked up my phone.

Opened the group chat.

“Girls, is the beer plan still on?”

Replies came instantly.

—Of course!
—We’re waiting!
—Tonight we celebrate freedom!

I touched up my lipstick.

Grabbed my keys.

My bag.

My dignity.

As I headed out, his voice echoed desperately from the bathroom:
“Where are you going?!”

I smiled.

“To a meeting,” I replied.

I paused just long enough.

“The important kind… you know.”

And I left.

But that wasn’t the end.

Two hours later, I came home—laughing, smelling like beer and freedom.

He was sitting on the couch.

Pale. Drained. Defeated.

Phone in his hand.

“Did you enjoy yourself?” he asked flatly.

“Very much,” I said, setting my bag down.

He looked at the phone.

“Carolina texted me.”

I stayed silent.

“I canceled.”

That surprised me.

“Oh really?”

He ran a hand over his face.

“Because I realized something today.”

I waited.

“If it takes a la:xa:tive to remind me I’m married… then I was already too far gone.”
Silence filled the room.

Not comfortable.

But… honest.

I exhaled slowly.

“Next time,” I said, “I won’t use laxatives.”

He raised an eyebrow.

“No?”

I met his eyes.

“No.”

A pause.

“I’ll just have your suitcases waiting at the door.”

For the first time in a long time…

He had nothing to say.

He looked down.

And in that moment, I understood something simple:

Revenge isn’t always loud.
It isn’t always destructive.

Sometimes… it’s just a reminder.

That respect is something you either learn gently—

Or life teaches you… the hard way.

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