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It Was My Boss Who Told Me My Husband Was Cheating on Me: How I Learned the Truth, Faced Six Months …
My boss was the one who told me my husband was cheating on me.
I was married and working at a small family-run firm in Manchester. My boss, Richard Morton, had been single since his divorce and had always had a bit of a flirtatious manner with me. I was never rude, but he was persistent at times. I always made it clear there were boundaries. On more than one occasion, I told him to stop, explained that I was married and that his behaviour was starting to make things awkward, especially since the rest of the office was beginning to notice. He said he understood, and after that, we managed to keep things professional.
One afternoon, he called me into his office. He closed the door behind me, looked rather serious, and said we needed to talk about something personal. “Does your husband still go away most weekends?” he asked. I told him yes. Then, straight out, he said, “I saw him with another woman.”
He went on to explain that his deputy manager had gone out with mates to a pub in Liverpool the previous weekend, and Richard swung by later in the evening to join them. Thats where they spotted my husband. Apparently, he was there with another womanand they were clearly more than just friends. I told him I didnt believe it, but then he produced his phone and played a video for me.
The footage wasnt particularly good. Too dark, a fair distance from the pair of them, and the music was blaring. Still, I recognised my husband at once: his clothes, the way he moved, even his profile when he turned his head. There was no mistaking it. All at once, I felt fury, humiliation, and a crushing helplessness. I left Richards office and went straight home.
That night, I confronted my husband. At first he denied everything, then he insisted it was a “one-off mistake.” But he didnt leave.
The six months that followed were a nightmare. I no longer wanted to be with him, but he refused to move out. Because we rented a flat together, he kept saying he had every right to stay. He began making my life unbearableblaring music at sunrise, inviting friends over without a word, leaving the place in a state, making snide remarks, and outright mocking me. Every argument was worse than the last. I could barely sleep and anxiety became a constant companion.
Then, one day while sifting through paperwork, I checked the tenancy agreement and realised it would soon expire. In that instant, everything became painfully simple: this isnt my home, and I have no obligation to endure any of this. I started looking for a place of my own. I packed what I needed, signed a new lease, and leftno dramatic goodbye, just taking what mattered and closing that chapter.
Through it all, Richard watched from the sidelines, at first just making sure I was alrightasking if I needed anything and offering support when he could. Slowly, we began talking outside the officetexting at first, then meeting in person for coffee. I told him outright that I wasnt ready for anything more, that I needed space and peace. He respected that. Months passed before anything changed between us.
Eventually, I found a new job. It had nothing to do with RichardI simply got a better offer, with a higher salary and a more challenging position. I handed in my notice, and from there, the nature of my relationship with Richard shifted. Suddenly, he was no longer my boss, just a man I enjoyed spending time with.
Today marks a year since we started dating.
My ex-husband disappeared from my life. I lost a marriage, yes. But I gained peaceand a good man. Life has a way of surprising you, and if Ive learned anything, its that sometimes losing something you thought you needed opens the door to finding what you really deserve.
