My Husband of 22 Years Started Taking Out the Trash at 3 AM – So One Night, I Followed Him

I’ve been married to Dave for 22 years and I’m Lucy, 47.

I rolled over, my hand looking for the familiar warmth of Dave’s body, but I found only cold sheets. It was 3:12 a.m.

“Dave?” I muttered into the darkness.

No response came.

The kitchen stood empty, moonlight streaming through the window above the sink.

Dave came inside, closing it softly behind him.

“God, you scared me,” I said.

“Where were you?”

He froze for a moment, then shrugged. “Just taking the trash out.”

“At three in the morning?”

“Yeah. I couldn’t sleep… found I’d get it done.” He said.

I stared at him in the dim hallway light. In 22 years of marriage, Dave had never voluntarily taken out the trash disposed of garbage, let alone in the middle of the night.

“Since when do you dispose of garbage at all?”

He gave me a quick smile and disappeared down the hall.

The next morning, I checked under the kitchen sink. The trash can sat empty, the liner crisp and new.

However something felt wrong.

“Sleep okay?” I asked, watching his face.

“Like a baby.” He smiled. “You?”

“Fine.” I said. “I still don’t understand why you’d get up at three in the morning to dispose of the trash.”

Then he nodded, laughing. “It was full. Figured I’d get it out before the truck came. Did I commit a crime?!”

That night, I’d catch him this time. But exhaustion won, and I woke at dawn to find the trash gone again and Dave already in the shower.

“You’re up early,” he said.

“Couldn’t sleep much. You?”

“Slept like a rock. Took the trash out, then didn’t budge after that.”

On Thursday, I set my phone alarm for 2:55 a.m. When it rang, I kept my breathing steady, my eyes closed. When I opened them, Dave’s side of the bed was already empty… and cold.

Our street looked tranquil with the porch lights casting yellow pools on empty sidewalks. Then I saw him.

Dave stood on the front porch of the blue house across the street.

The porch light turned on, and there she was, wearing a red silk dress. She looked nothing like me.

She wrapped her arms around his neck. He pulled her close, his hands splaying across her back like he owned her. They kissed with the hunger of teenagers, and I watched my husband become someone I’d never seen before.

I had maybe 30 seconds before he reached our front door.

I dove into the hallway closet, my heart pounding, so loud I was sure he’d hear it through the walls.

“Dave?” I muttered.

“Mmm?” “Everything okay?”

“I got up to use the bathroom. Where were you?”

“What do you mean? I’ve been right here.” He reached for me, his hand still warm from touching her. “Come here.”

“Love you,” he said.

“Love you too,” I whispered back.

Friday morning, I called in sick to work. I couldn’t forcus on spreadsheets and client meetings when my marriage was failing down in five-minute intervals every night.

Dave came home with flowers that evening. Red roses, my favorites.

“What’s the occasion?” I asked, ordering them in a vase.

“Can’t a man surprise his wife?” He kissed my cheek.

That night, I was ready with my phone charged, the camera app open, and positioned myself by the bedroom window like a detective on a stakeout.

At 3:07 a.m., Dave slipped out of bed. At 3:12, he crossed the street. At 3:15, Betty opened her door wearing nothing but a red slip that made my stomach turn.

I recorded everything. The kiss that lasted 30 seconds.

At 3:20, he came home. At 3:22, he was snoring beside me like the faithful husband he’d never been.

I gathered evidence for a week. Seven videos and seven nights of watching my husband select someone else while I pretended to sleep.

On the eighth night, I didn’t set an alarm.

Her assistant would find it Monday morning, along with my retainer check and a note that simply said: “I need everything. Let’s schedule an appointment soon!”

“You’re up late,” he said.

“How was the trash?”

“The what?”

“The trash. You’ve been taking it out every night this week.”

His face went pale. “Oh. Yeah. It was fine.”

“Good.” I closed the magazine and stood up. “I’m going to try to sleep now.”

“Lucy?” His voice caught on my name. “Is everything okay?”

“Everything’s perfect, Dave. Absolutely perfect.”

Three weeks later, I handed him the divorce papers over morning coffee. He read them twice before the words sank in.

“Lucy, what’s this?”

“Your freedom!” I said. “Isn’t that what you wanted?”

“I don’t understand.”

“Sure you do.” I pulled out my phone and opened the video from night three. “You understand perfectly.”

“How long?” He said loudly.

“How long what? How long have you been lying to me? How long have you been sneaking around? How long have I known?” I set the phone down. “Pick your question, Dave. I’ve got time.”

He reached for my hand, but I rejected it. .

“Lucy, please. Let me explain.”

“Explain what? That 22 years wasn’t enough? That our children weren’t enough? That I wasn’t enough?”

“No thanks. I’ve heard enough explanations to last a lifetime.”

He moved in with Betty the day after I filed. I heard through neighborhood gossip that she dumped him six weeks later for the contractor fixing her roof. Apparently, she got bored if the thrill of stealing someone else’s husband wore off.

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