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My husband started going to church every day. I thought he’d had a religious awakening, but it turned out it wasn’t prayer that drew him there.

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My husband started going to church every day. At first, I thought hed rediscovered his faith. But it turned out, it wasnt prayer drawing him there.

Every day at half five, hed leave the house, telling me he was off to Evensong. Well, thats something, I thought. People do change after fifty. I never suspected that all that prayer was just a smokescreen.

It had all seemed harmless enough. Ever since Easter, hed been talking more about faith, saying things like, Somethings weighing on me, or I need to cleanse myself. I put it down to a midlife crisis hed never been particularly religious before, but if prayer gave him peace, I wouldnt stop him. Id cook supper, hed go out, and return ninety minutes later, calmer, as though some invisible burden really had been lifted.

Then, I began to notice small changes. Shirt ironed, hair carefully combed, a dash of aftershave. He said it was out of respect for the place. That surely God deserved a bit of tidiness. It sounded silly, but I didnt say a word. After all, he wasnt drinking, wasnt starting arguments, wasnt glued to the telly all day. Just church.

Everything changed one Sunday, after wed come back from his sisters for lunch. By mistake, I grabbed his jacket instead of mine. I reached in for my keys, but pulled out a receipt from a café just down from the church. Two coffees, two cakes, Thursday, 6:05pm. Funny, hed said he had rosary prayers that Thursday.

I said nothing. Not yet. But the next day, I followed him. I sat at the very back pew. Service began, and there he was, alone. I could see his profile, lips moving in prayer. After communion, he was the first to leave. I slipped out too and thats when I saw her. Waiting on the corner, smiling, dressed for a date. They kissed. Not like friends.

I staggered home, trembling. My heart was pounding like a drum. I felt shame. Not rage, not despair, just shame. How could I have missed this? How could I be so blind?

The next day, I asked him straight out:
Whats her name?

He froze. Didnt pretend, didnt dodge. He let out a sigh.
Charlotte. I met her at church. She helps organise the services.
And you were helping too, I suppose?

He said nothing. That silence spoke more than a thousand words.

I didnt make a scene. I didnt throw him out in a rage. But I was clear:
If you love praying so much, youd better start praying for a new place to live. Because youre not staying here.

He moved out a week later. To his friend from parish council. Our children were stunned, but theyre adults now they understood. Later, one of my daughters told me:
Mum, better now than in ten years, when youre seventy and all youll have left is tears, not strength.

Those first weeks were hard. I felt betrayed, defeated. I dreaded that no one would ever love me again, that Id end up alone. But in time, I realised that solitude is better than living an illusion.

Its been six months now. Sometimes I see them together she clutching his arm, him looking lost, like a man caught in a fog. Sometimes I wonder if hell ever come back. But then I remember the scent of those unfamiliar perfumes clinging to him, the way he looked at her as he left the church.

Thats when I know, with absolute certainty: I dont want a life with someone who needs the cover of church walls to hide the truth. Id rather live honestly. Even if, sometimes, it hurts.

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