He Chose Another Woman During Her Surgery, Then Came Home To Proof-kimochi

The first call came at 2:17 in the morning, when the ocean outside the hotel window looked like a sheet of black glass and the room smelled like salt, clean sheets, and the expensive candle burning itself down on the table.

Michael saw David’s name glowing on his phone and felt nothing noble.

Only irritation.

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It was a bad hour for a phone call, but it was an even worse hour for the kind of phone call a man gets when his carefully separated lives are starting to crash into each other.

He let it buzz once.

Then twice.

On the third ring, he picked it up because some old part of him still understood that David did not call in the middle of the night for small things.

“If your wife dies tonight,” David said, breathless and furious, “the least you can do is answer the phone.”

Michael sat up.

The sheet slid off his waist, and the cold air from the vent touched his bare shoulders.

For a second, he forgot the oceanfront suite, the glass on the table, the shoes by the door that were not Sarah’s, and the lie he had used to get himself there.

“What are you talking about?” he asked.

“Sarah is in the hospital,” David said. “It’s bad. They’re taking her into emergency surgery right now.”

Michael swung his feet to the carpet.

The room went too quiet.

There was the soft hum of the air conditioner, the low pulse of waves beyond the balcony glass, and the dull sound of his own heartbeat beginning to climb into his ears.

Sarah.

His wife of eleven years.

The woman whose name was on the mortgage, on the emergency forms, on the inside of every ordinary morning he had started taking for granted.

He pictured her in the kitchen in one of his old sweatshirts, tapping a spoon against a coffee mug while she asked whether he wanted eggs or toast.

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