I was stuck in lockdown with my unfaithful husband

Couple look unhappy sitting next to each other - PeopleImages 
Couple look unhappy sitting next to each other - PeopleImages

My husband of 25 years moved out on Friday. There was a time not so long ago when that sentence would have seemed unthinkable. But since Christmas, when I discovered Nick* had been cheating on me for months with a woman he’d met at work, I have been living a strange kind of hell – intensified all the more by interminable weeks of lockdown.

In hindsight, there should have been alarm bells. It was mid-December when, dreadfully ill in bed with shingles, Nick announced he had to go to Italy on a last-minute work trip. “Are you sure?” I pleaded, worrying about being alone while I was that poorly. “It’s work,” he said. “I’ve got to.” On his return, he was acting strangely and at one point slipped up, mentioning something about Austria – I checked the Google location history on his iPad, and saw that he had indeed been there. I could see the hotel they’d stayed in, the restaurants they’d eaten in, and all the other places where they’d been meeting up regularly for months when I thought he was working.

We decided to battle on through – partly for the boys, who are 22 and 25, but also because I was in total shock and briefly entertained the idea of working through it. At 50, I never expected I wouldn’t be married forever. Now, after being forced to spend four months together, the idea seems laughable.

The decision to split came in the new year, but Nick refused to move out until we’d gone through mediation and sold the house. My solicitor said my leaving would put me in a weaker negotiating position. Within days of putting the house on the market, Britain’s lockdown began.

It’s a form of torture, having to endure four months locked in a house with a man by whom you’ve just been hurt so badly. The stress made me so ill I considered leaving and putting six months’ rent on the credit card, but I simply couldn’t afford it.

Instead, we cohabited awkwardly. While other families seemed to be cosying down together, we drew up a strict plan for how to avoid crossing paths in the house.

We kept ourselves separate: I ate dinner with the boys in the kitchen and then we’d disappear, and he would come down and cook himself something afterwards. We agreed I would have the lounge and he’d have a television up in one of the boys’ rooms, which he’d taken over.

There were rows, of course, and it’s fair to say I’m not proud of some of my behaviour. After 25 years of marriage, having tense mediation meetings on Zoom about what percentage of house equity you are owed while your husband sits on a laptop in the next room is surreal, to put it mildly.

It has been particularly tough on our boys, who I told as soon as I found out. They are furious with their dad but have been so supportive of me and mature about it all; I couldn’t have done it without them.

Four months of lockdown has slowed down our divorce proceedings, but it has hastened one thing: clarity that this relationship is over.

*Name has been changed