The Family Dinner Where One Missing Car Exposed A Marriage Lie-heuh

My father’s question landed so quietly that, for half a second, I almost pretended I had not heard it.

“Why did you come in a taxi, Jenna?”

He kept his knife and fork resting neatly beside his plate, his voice level, his expression ordinary.

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Then he added, “Where is the Honda Civic I gave you?”

That was when the room changed.

Not loudly.

Not with a gasp or a chair scraping back.

It changed the way a room changes when everyone knows a line has been crossed, but no one yet wants to be the person who says so.

The dining table in my parents’ house was laid the way it always was for the monthly family dinner, too polished for what was about to happen.

White plates sat beneath warm light, wineglasses caught little flickers from the chandelier, and the roast beef on the serving dish still steamed as if nothing in the world had shifted.

Rain had followed me from the taxi.

It clung to the hem of my coat and to the pavement smell on my shoes, and even after I had hung the coat in the narrow hallway, I could feel the dampness in my sleeves.

I had arrived trying to look composed.

I had paid the driver with the last folded notes in my purse and stepped out beside cars that made my own absence impossible to hide.

My uncle’s BMW was already there.

Jason’s family SUV was tucked close to the hedge.

Aunt Lauren had arrived early, as she always did, bringing a pudding she wanted everyone to admire before they tasted it.

And Patrick, my husband, had arrived before me.

He was already seated when I walked into the dining room.

He did not stand.

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