Husband Moved His Mistress In, Then The Safe Key Ruined Him-heuh

The first thing Catherine noticed was not the woman on her sofa.

It was the smell.

Warm baby milk, faintly sour, sitting in the air of her kitchen where there should have been coffee, washing-up liquid and the ordinary tiredness of coming home early on a damp afternoon.

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Her heels clicked once on the narrow hallway floor, then stopped.

A drip from her coat sleeve landed beside the mat.

Somewhere in the living room, a rattle shook twice.

Catherine still had one hand on the lock of her own front door when she saw the baby bottles beside her mugs.

Then she saw the nappies on her coffee table.

Then the children’s clothes folded over the arm of her sofa.

Then the open suitcase by her mother’s bookshelf.

And finally, Margot.

Margot sat very still with a sleeping baby in her arms, her face turned down as though she had been caught reading someone else’s private letter.

Another child, a little older, sat on a blanket spread across the floor, chewing the end of a rattle with the calm, bright innocence of someone who had no idea they had been placed in the middle of a war.

Benjamin stood in front of them.

He had taken off his jacket.

That small detail struck Catherine harder than it should have.

He had made himself comfortable.

He had come into her house, into the home her mother had left her, and settled in as though he had every right to rearrange not only the furniture but the truth.

Catherine had not expected him home.

Her training session at Oak Creek had been cancelled just after lunch, and she had driven back through the grey drizzle thinking only of slipping out of her heels, putting the kettle on, and sitting for a while with her phone face down.

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