Excluded From Her In-Laws’ Party, She Made One Quiet Phone Call-heuh

The night Daniel Hail went to his brother’s engagement party without me, the house sounded too clean.

Rain tapped softly against the upstairs windows.

The bedroom smelled like cedar hangers, lavender detergent, and the faint starch of the pale blue shirt Daniel was buttoning in front of the mirror.

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His mother had bought him that shirt.

Margaret Hail liked Daniel in pale blue because it made him look expensive without looking loud.

It was the kind of shirt she approved for Christmas cards, country club brunches, and any photograph that might later be placed in a silver frame on a mantel.

I stood in the doorway wearing the earrings I had picked out for the party.

Small pearls.

Nothing flashy.

Nothing Margaret could call “too much” without sounding like exactly what she was.

Daniel kept looking at me in the mirror, then looking away.

That was how I knew.

A guilty man can rehearse a sentence all day and still give himself away with his shoulders.

I asked, “What time are we leaving?”

His fingers stopped at the last button.

He did not turn around right away.

Outside, a car rolled past on the wet street, tires whispering over the asphalt.

Inside, the only sound was the rain and Daniel breathing like the room had gotten smaller.

“Audrey,” he said.

Just my name.

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