"Look this way, Bee." My husband knelt next me with his phone positioned at eye level. The glittering Mediterranean Sea stretched behind him, and the warm wind licked my skin.
I was sprawled stomach-side down on a sun chaise, my cheek pushed against a terry cloth towel. My head spun from drinking too much champagne, and I stared over my sunglasses, aware of the crowd around us. I flashed what I hoped was a convincing smile and tried to calm my aching heart.
My husband, the man responsible for my current depression, encouraged me to laugh. I gave a false giggle while hiding my red eyes behind oversized sunglasses and holding back the scream lodged in my chest.
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When he finished snapping pictures, he sent a batch to me. I pulled my wide-brimmed sunhat low on my brow and selected the photo that I thought looked the most carefree. How had my husband captured that moment when I had no happiness left inside me?
After a swig of champagne, I wrote a breezy caption that avoided what everyone was wondering: how were we doing? I posted it to Facebook.
Six weeks earlier, I had discovered my husband’s affair and ran away to Paris. There, I planned to regroup.
We had already survived my husband’s traumatic brain injury two years earlier. The TBI had left him unable to recall many parts of our life together, and I had used old photos to remind him of our important life events. I created the history I wanted him to know, leaving out the ugly bits.