I didn’t sleep that night. The photo that once felt harmless now felt radioactive, every pixel loaded with accusation. My husband replayed old insecurities out loud, asking the same questions in different ways, searching my face for cracks. I swore I’d been alone. I retraced every step, every sound, every car that passed. Logic said it could be a trick of the light, a stranger walking by, or just a distorted shape our minds turned into someone we knew too well. But logic doesn’t stand a chance against fear.
In the end, the photo became less important than what it revealed. It showed us how fragile trust can be, how unresolved history lingers in the smallest things. We chose to talk, really talk, about the ex, about jealousy, about fear. The reflection faded. The doubt didn’t vanish overnight, but we decided the marriage was worth more than a ghost in a window.