A graphic designer named Harper, 34, believed she had a perfect and unshakable seven-year marriage with her husband, Mark, until the night of his promotion party. Mark had just made partner at his firm, and the couple, along with their four-year-old daughter Sophie, attended a corporate celebration. Harper felt immense pride watching her husband bask in the spotlight.
The family was enjoying the festive atmosphere when Sophie, known for her candidness, tugged on Harper’s sleeve near the dessert table. In a loud voice, she pointed across the room and exclaimed, “Mommy, look! That’s the lady with the worms!” Harper, mortified and confused, tried to quiet her daughter, but Sophie continued, “The red ones. I saw them on her bed in her house.” Harper’s blood ran cold. Sophie then pointed to a woman across the room, Tina, who worked in accounting and had always seemed a bit too close to Mark at work events.
Harper crouched down again, pressing Sophie for more details. Sophie, blushing, whispered that “Daddy said not to tell anyone about the worms. That Mommy would be upset.” Just then, Mark, flushed from attention, joined them. Harper, her voice tight, immediately pulled him aside. She confronted him, telling him what Sophie had said about being at Tina’s house and seeing “red worms” on her bed, which Harper assumed were hair curlers.
Tina, overhearing, calmly stirred her latte and confessed, “I was wondering when you’d figure it out.” She added that Mark had told her it wouldn’t take long and that once Harper left, they could stop sneaking around. Devastated, Harper, with tears brimming, simply stated, “He’s all yours,” and calmly walked away.
On the drive home, Harper felt a strange sense of calm, not heartbreak or fury, but a profound sense of finality. Over the next few weeks, she quietly filed for separation and divorce, hiring a lawyer and meticulously gathering documents to ensure the best outcome for herself and Sophie. Mark, surprisingly, didn’t fight it and soon moved in with Tina.
Harper recounts that things for Mark and Tina aren’t as “shiny” now. Sophie, who refuses to visit her father if Tina is present, returns with stories of the new couple’s arguments. Mark, once charismatic, now seems tired and mutters through drop-offs. Harper, on the other hand, is thriving. She sleeps peacefully, has rejoined a Pilates class, rediscovered sketching, and painted Sophie’s room with glow-in-the-dark stars. When Sophie occasionally asks why Daddy doesn’t live with them anymore, Harper simply says, “Because he lied about the worms.” Sophie, in her childlike wisdom, nods, declaring, “Lying is bad,” and adds, “I’m glad we have no worms,” hugging her mother.