Dipsticks, Lubricants & Abject Infidelity !link! May 2026

She wiped the dipstick on her husband’s white undershirt—the one he’d left balled in the laundry, the one that smelled of someone else’s shampoo.

Sometimes infidelity isn’t about the heart. It’s about the parts that should never need greasing—and the one dipstick who leaves the evidence behind. dipsticks, lubricants & abject infidelity

The garage fell silent. The lubricant dripped once onto the concrete. A confession without a single word spoken. She wiped the dipstick on her husband’s white

Under the hood of his sedan, she’d found a half-empty tube. Under the tube, a receipt from a motel off I-85. Under the receipt, a single, long black hair coiled like a question mark. The garage fell silent

Not because the oil was low—it was glistening, amber, healthy. No, it was the other thing. The faint, chemical sweetness clinging to the metal beneath the petrol smell. A lubricant her husband didn’t use. A brand called “Silk-Ease,” marketed for “quiet, high-performance applications.”