At Their Anniversary Dinner, His Mistress Announced A Baby-hihehu

The candle on our anniversary table would not stay still.

Every time a server passed, the flame bent sideways, then stood back up as if nothing had happened.

I remember that more clearly than the music, the white tablecloth, or the anniversary dessert waiting under a silver dome near the service station.

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I remember the smell of garlic butter and warm bread, the scrape of Marcus’s wedding ring against his wineglass, and the way my own hands looked calm in my lap.

They were not calm.

They were simply trained.

By then, I had spent twenty-two days teaching myself not to react.

Twenty-two days of finding one thing, then another, then another.

A bank alert that did not match his story.

A deleted calendar invite that still showed on the old shared tablet.

A company card charge at a restaurant I had never been to.

A text message preview from Jessica that lit up his phone at 6:13 a.m. while he was in the shower.

Marcus thought he was careful because he used passwords.

He forgot that wives do not need passwords to notice when a man comes home smelling like someone else’s shampoo.

We had been married ten years that night.

Ten years of grocery lists and mortgage payments and flu season and family barbecues.

Ten years of me knowing which shirts he wore when he wanted to impress somebody, which laugh he used on clients, and which silence meant he was hiding something.

That was the part men like Marcus never understood.

Love makes you observant long before betrayal makes you suspicious.

He sat across from me in a navy suit, talking about work in that polished voice he used when he wanted me to stop asking questions.

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