Husband’s Baptism Lie Exposed When His Secret Son Was Named-heuh

Ethan left the house smelling like someone else.

Not faintly.

Not the accidental trace of a crowded lift or a colleague leaning too close.

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It was perfume, sweet and expensive, clinging to the peach-coloured shirt he had somehow acquired without ever putting it through our wash.

I noticed it while the kettle was still clicking itself off in the kitchen, and the sound suddenly felt too ordinary for what was happening in front of me.

He stood in the hallway smoothing his cuffs, polished watch catching the light, shoes cleaned to a shine that felt more ceremonial than professional.

“I’m going to a client’s son’s baptism,” he said.

He did not look at me when he said it.

That was the first truth of the morning.

Not the sentence.

The avoidance.

I had been married to Ethan long enough to know the difference between a busy man and a rehearsed one.

A busy man forgets his keys, answers questions halfway, and drinks coffee while standing up.

A rehearsed man checks his watch twice, says too much and too little at once, and kisses your forehead because he knows it closes conversations.

“What kind of client invites you to a baptism on a Sunday?” I asked.

He gave a tired little sigh, as though I had made an ugly scene instead of asking a reasonable question.

“Claire, please. It is work. I’m representing the company.”

The word representing landed between us like a clean napkin laid over a dirty table.

I held my mug with both hands.

The coffee had gone lukewarm, but I needed something to hold that was not his wrist.

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