My husband, Alden, died a month ago—until yesterday, when his phone buzzed with a hotel charge. Then his boss, “Marlon,” called. I drove to the hotel, hoping it was fraud. But at the front desk, they gave me his room number: 403.
I knocked. No answer. Then a teenage girl opened the door.
“Are you here for him too?” she whispered.
Inside, I saw takeout containers, a duffel bag, and a photo of Alden. She said he’d stayed last week—with another woman.
Then I found a browser search on his phone: “What happens if you fake your death and get caught?”
It hit me—he faked it. For life insurance. For a new life.
I went to the manager and reported identity fraud. Three days later, police found him—alive, with that woman, across the state line. He’d forged his death certificate and planned to vanish to Belize.
At his trial, I stared him down. He said it “wasn’t about leaving me.” But he was never coming back.
Now I’ve moved, rebuilt, and I’m finally free.
The worst part wasn’t losing him—it was believing the lie.
Truth hurts. But it also clears the path to something better.