My Daughter Heard His Phone Call—Then The Front Door Locked-Teptep

Derek left the house at 7:06 on Saturday morning with a suitcase, a dark coat, and the calm smile he used when he wanted me to stop asking questions.

He said it was a business trip.

He said he would be back Sunday evening.

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He said I should not stress about anything.

By then I had been married to him long enough to know that “don’t stress” usually meant he had already done something worth stressing over.

Still, I stood at the front door and let him kiss my forehead.

The kiss was quick, dry, practised.

His suitcase wheels rattled down the path, across the small front drive, and towards the car.

The morning was the colour of dirty wool, all low cloud and drizzle, with the pavement shining under the streetlamps that had not yet switched off.

I watched him put his bag in the boot.

He looked back once and lifted his hand.

To anyone else, it would have looked ordinary.

A husband leaving for work.

A wife in the doorway.

A child still asleep upstairs.

A semi-detached house beginning another quiet weekend.

Then he drove away.

I closed the door and stood in the narrow hallway for a few seconds, listening to the engine fade.

The house seemed to exhale around me.

There were coats on the hooks, Lily’s little trainers tipped sideways by the skirting board, and my own damp umbrella still leaning in the corner from the school run the day before.

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