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It’s been 15 years, but I have never slept with my husband

It has been fifteen years, yet I never once lay with my husband—until I stumbled upon a conversation between him and his closest friend.
The gas cylinder man, the maid, the delivery boy in our Gurgaon housing complex (on the edge of New Delhi), still believe that my husband and I are an ideal office couple: leaving together in the morning, returning at dusk, throwing out the trash on the right day, arranging shoes neatly by the entrance, watering balcony plants on Sundays, ordering spicy masala noodles. None of them realize the only true fact inside that ninth-floor flat: for fifteen years, our two pillows have never touched.

Our bedroom has no lock. The door swings like the kitchen’s, like the one to the balcony. Yet the mattress is split by an unseen river. His lamp stands tall with a harsh white glow. Mine is soft yellow, covered with a thin cloth shade. On stormy monsoon nights, I curl on my left, listening to rain pound the tin roof. He turns on his right, back against the wall, breathing lightly as the water rushes down.

I carefully hang his shirts, fold his socks, place the toothbrush at a forty-five-degree slant in the cup. I also recall too clearly the smile that never touched his eyes whenever relatives teased:
— When will you let your parents cradle grandchildren?

His reply was always:
— The company is handling a major project.

We married in Sawan, the rainy season of North India. It drizzled faintly that wedding night. After the feast, my mother-in-law removed her hairpin and told me:
— It is the daughter-in-law who keeps the household fire burning.

But the flame within me dimmed, like an oil lamp running dry. That first night, he spread fresh sheets, set my favorite book by the headboard and whispered:
— You’re tired, rest.

He pulled away the quilt and turned aside. I bit my lip when I heard a pin drop onto the tiled floor.

Only the first night, I thought. Yet on the second, the tenth, the hundredth, each time I moved closer, he withdrew. Never cruelly, only as if skirting a stone he already knew by heart.

He remained a dutiful husband: mixing bottles early at dawn, remembering my mother’s death anniversary before I did, during the epidemic circling Delhi’s Dawa Bazaar to buy medicine. My mother would praise him:
— You are truly blessed.

I smiled bitterly: Blessed for whom?
By the tenth year, I drafted a divorce petition, saved as der_late.docx. Deleted, rewrote, over and over. By the thirteenth, I printed and placed it before him. He read, looked up:
— Give me some time.
— Time until when?

He stared at the coat rack:
— After this season.

Which season? Monsoon? Mango bloom? Or the season when patience finally ends?

I tried everything: rage, blunt honesty, counseling. The therapist questioned:
— Do you struggle with desire?
He nodded.
— With orientation?
He nodded again.
— With trauma?
This time silence.

At dinner, I longed to smash plates, just to hear sound break through emptiness.

Fifteen years. I stopped sobbing. Tears came like dishwater running, but the oil never rinsed away.

One day, I returned early. Rain burst suddenly in Delhi. As I opened the door, I heard his voice inside the study:

— Hello, Aarav?

Aarav—my dearest friend from high school. Every Saturday, he and Aarav drank beer, he came home late, breath smelling of liquor, yet his eyes stayed clear. I never felt jealous. Until that day.

— She filed for divorce again, — my husband sighed.
— Divorce? — Aarav sounded shocked.

He laughed bitterly: — Fifteen years, Aarav.

— What now?

— I will not divorce. I gave my word.

— I despise that vow. To whom did you promise? To me or to him?

— To both.

I froze. He continued softly:

— That night, I still hear the brakes screech.

Then silence.

— We are both to blame. My duty is to let him rest at night. Yours is to give me strength.

I trembled in the kitchen.

That evening, face to face, I asked:
— Do you love Aarav?
He answered:
— I love promises. From you. From Aarav.

I left for my mother’s house, carrying a suitcase, a cactus, and opened his desk drawer. Inside I found:

A hefty life insurance policy naming me as beneficiary. Clause: “If marital status changes within twenty-four months, contract becomes void.” Date signed: September 23, two years earlier.

A receipt from the hematology ward for chemotherapy.

An old photograph: me with a boy at Delhi University gate, helmet in his hand, smiling wide. Rohan—my first love. I believed he had di:ed in a rainy-night cr:ash.

On the back I had written: “Rohan, showers always come early this season.”

Beside it, a slip of paper: “I’m sorry. – V.” (Vikram, my husband).

I sought Aarav. He gave me a letter from Vikram. Inside: the insurance files, hospital bills. Aarav explained:
— Vikram had lymphoma. He hid it so the policy would take effect. Signed September 23.

Then he met my gaze:
— And… Rohan did not di:e. That night Vikram’s car braked and struck Rohan’s bike. His face was disfigured. He couldn’t bear you seeing him. He vanished. He promised Vikram: he would let you marry, protect you, but never touch you.

I was shaken. Aarav removed his glasses, exposing a faint scar. He whispered:
— I am Rohan. I took the name Aarav. For fifteen years I remained near you, only under another identity.

When I confronted Vikram, he nodded:
— I kept the vow to Rohan. I never touched you. I only waited until the insurance secured your future.

He handed me his organ donation form. Donor’s name: Vikram Sharma.

By September 23, Vikram lay frail in the hospital. He gave me signed divorce papers:

— Sign them if you wish.

I set down the pen:
— You sign first. I’ll… decide later.

A month afterward, when the policy was validated, we divorced officially. Vikram shifted to a flat near the hospital. I went back to my mother’s, purchased a new bed with only one pillow.

Aarav—Rohan—called several times. Once I picked up.

— He never asked anything, only to tell you: “I’m Rohan. The coward who ran away.”

I answered:
— My name is Aarav now. You must learn to call me that. And call yourself too.

We met by the Yamuna river. Peering at me through a tea-stall window, he described his years of exile. I listened carefully, as if hearing another woman’s tale. I admitted:
— I don’t know if love remains. I feel gratitude, fury, pity. But I wish to learn to lie in the middle of a bed.

Rohan shook his head:
— This time I’ll wait. Right here. I won’t flee again.

When I returned, Vikram had left a bank slip marked “15 years rent – Vikram” and a note:

“I did my share: released the brake, let out the breath.

You do yours: burn the divorce files, buy flowers, place a pillow in the center of the bed. If someday you need someone to hang curtains, I’ll arrive as a neighbor.
Vikram – The man who didn’t touch you not from lack of love, but from fear of loving you wrongly.”

I turned on the yellow lamp, set the round cushion in the middle of the mattress. After fifteen years, for the very first time, I chose myself.

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Story

10 True Stories That Could OutshineSometimes, real life spins tales so gripping, so emotionally charged, that they rival the most dramatic Hollywood scripts. From shocking betrayals to long-held family secrets, these ten true stories are packed with unexpected twists and raw human emotion. Buckle up for a journey through the extraordinary experiences of ordinary people. 1. The Double Life Unveiled at Lunch For months, a woman and her boyfriend shared a cherished ritual: lunch every Wednesday at their favorite restaurant. One day, after her phone was stolen, she borrowed a waitress’s phone to call him. As she dialed his number, his contact appeared—complete with a photo of him and his dog. The waitress gasped, recognizing him as her own boyfriend. She usually had Wednesdays off but was covering a shift that day. Both women discovered they were dating the same man, each on Wednesdays. The revelation was as shocking as any plot twist on the big screen. 2. The Imaginary Husband A woman grew up believing her parents were divorced. Later, she discovered her father never existed. Her mother had fabricated a marriage, complete with a wedding ring and a name change, to avoid the stigma of single motherhood. She concocted excuses whenever family asked about her absent husband. Eventually, her father-in-law demanded she stop wearing the ring in his house. The elaborate deception unraveled, leaving a legacy of questions and a daughter grappling with the truth. 3. The Best Friend’s Betrayal When her best friend’s marriage ended, a woman offered her a place to stay. Two weeks later, she ran into her friend’s ex-husband, who revealed a devastating secret: her best friend and her own husband had been having an affair for four months. Her friend hadn’t sought refuge; she’d sought proximity to her lover. The woman confronted them, asked her friend to leave, and filed for divorce that very day. It was a harsh lesson in betrayal, but also a testament to resilience. 4. The Hidden Brother A man discovered his father had a secret brother who looked exactly like him. One day, he saw a man in the mall who resembled his dad so closely that he was certain it was him. That encounter led to the revelation of his uncle’s existence—a family secret kept hidden because the grandfather never acknowledged the child. With the patriarch gone, the family began discussing welcoming the long-lost brother into their lives, opening a new chapter of connection and reconciliation. 5. The Web of Family Secrets A woman’s best friend’s mother attempted to have an affair with her father. Her father confessed to her mother, leading to a rift between the families. Despite the adults’ fallout, the two girls continued their friendship. Later, it emerged that her father had multiple affairs, claiming depression as the cause. Simultaneously, her mother revealed she had been in love with someone else during their courtship but stayed with her father because she was pregnant. The tangled web of secrets and lies painted a complex portrait of love, loyalty, and the consequences of hidden truths. 6. The Grandmother’s Secret A woman learned that her grandmother had an affair with her sister’s husband, resulting in a pregnancy. The baby was left with a family member and died a few weeks later. When questioned, the grandmother evaded the topic, leaving the truth shrouded in mystery. The family speculated, but the full story remained elusive, a haunting secret buried in the past. 7. The Stranger in the Mirror A man recounted a chilling experience: he saw a man in the mall who looked exactly like his father. The resemblance was uncanny. This encounter led to the discovery that his father had a twin brother he had never acknowledged. The family had kept the existence of the twin a secret for decades. The revelation shook the man, forcing him to reevaluate his understanding of his family’s history and the reasons behind such a profound omission. 8. The Inheritance Revelation After her grandfather’s death, a woman discovered he had left a significant portion of his estate to a woman no one in the family had heard of. Investigations revealed that the woman was his daughter from an affair during his military service. The family grappled with the revelation, facing feelings of betrayal, confusion, and the challenge of integrating a new member into their midst. The inheritance became a symbol of secrets long buried and the complexities of familial bonds. 9. The Wedding That Never Was A man shared the story of his aunt, who had planned an elaborate wedding. On the day of the ceremony, the groom never showed up. Heartbroken, she claimed he had died in a car accident. Years later, the family discovered that the groom was alive and had simply left her at the altar. The aunt had fabricated his death to save face, carrying the lie for decades. The truth, when uncovered, brought a mix of sorrow and understanding for the pain she had endured. 10. The Silent Goodbye A woman recounted the story of her mother, who had a falling out with her sister over a family heirloom. They stopped speaking for years. When the sister died, the mother attended the funeral but didn’t approach the casket or speak to anyone. Later, the woman found a letter in her mother’s belongings, addressed to her sister, expressing deep regret and love. The letter was never sent. It was a silent goodbye, a testament to pride, pain, and the words left unspoken.