At The Airport, My Husband Chose His Mistress—Then Our Son Spoke-heuh

The first thing I noticed was Daniel’s hand resting on another woman’s suitcase.

Not his suitcase.

Hers.

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It was pale beige, smart and expensive-looking, the sort of case that did not get shoved into cupboards or dragged through puddles without complaint.

It looked like a promise of hotel sheets, late breakfasts, and nobody asking difficult questions.

Daniel Carter stood beside it near the international check-in desks, wearing the navy coat I had bought him for our tenth anniversary.

He had complained at the time that it made him look too serious.

That morning, beneath the hard airport lights, he looked serious enough to lie well and polished enough to be believed.

My six-year-old son, Noah, stopped so abruptly beside me that our carry-on bumped into the back of my ankle.

“Mum,” he said.

It was not loud.

It was barely more than breath.

But I heard the change in him before I properly understood what I was seeing.

Children have a particular voice when they discover adults have moved the floor beneath them.

I followed his eyes.

For a second, the terminal seemed to tilt.

People were everywhere, pulling suitcases, balancing paper cups, checking passports, folding coats over arms still damp from the morning rain.

A baby cried near the queue barrier.

A woman in a black work dress argued softly into her phone.

A man behind us muttered sorry as he edged past with a case too wide for the gap.

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