He Gave Away Her SUV, Then Discovered Whose House He Lived In-Teptep

The morning Grayson gave away my SUV, the house smelled of toast, warm butter and the first proper rain of autumn.

The kettle had just clicked off in the kitchen, and the windows were blurred at the edges with damp.

I was standing beside the sink with a tea towel over one shoulder, trying to persuade Noah to finish his cereal and Ava to stop reading at the breakfast table, when I saw the black Volvo moving down the drive.

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At first, I did not understand what I was seeing.

It was one of those moments where your brain refuses to make the obvious connection because the obvious connection is too insulting.

The car rolled slowly past the front step, past the wet paving stones, past the clipped hedge Grayson liked to pretend he maintained himself.

Then the driver turned slightly.

It was Sienna.

My sister-in-law was behind the wheel of my Volvo XC90, wearing oversized sunglasses on a grey morning and driving away as if she had borrowed a cup of sugar, not taken a car I had bought outright with my grandmother’s inheritance.

For three seconds, I stood perfectly still.

The spatula in my hand dripped butter onto the worktop.

Ava looked up first.

“Mum?”

“It’s all right,” I said automatically, although nothing about it was all right.

Noah was seven and still young enough to believe a calm voice meant a calm world.

Ava was ten, and already old enough to know when adults were lying gently for a child’s sake.

I watched the SUV disappear beyond the corner where the red post box stood, bright and cheerful against the rain.

I told myself there would be an explanation.

Perhaps Sienna had an emergency.

Perhaps Grayson had lent it for the morning and forgotten to tell me.

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