The Rainy Summer My Husband’s Son Noticed the Wife Mark Forgot-eirian

For eight years, I defended Mark Carter with the kind of loyalty people mistake for love.

I said he was busy.

I said he was tired.

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I said the flights, the late dinners, the birthday calls from airport lounges, and the way he kissed the top of my head without looking at my face were all just seasons of a hard-working man’s life.

But deep down, I knew the truth.

Mark had not left me in one dramatic moment.

He had left me in small, polite pieces.

He left me every time he answered an email while I was speaking. He left me every time he said, “We’ll talk when things calm down,” knowing things never calmed down. He left me in restaurants, in bed, at family dinners, in front of neighbors who thought I was lucky because my husband wore good suits and paid every bill on time.

So when his son Ethan came to stay with us that summer, I was already lonelier than I had admitted to myself.

Ethan was twenty-three, freshly graduated, and trying to decide what kind of man he wanted to become. He had Mark’s eyes, but none of Mark’s practiced distance. He carried his own plate to the sink. He asked if I needed help with the groceries. When I answered a question, he did not look through me toward the next thing.

That was all it took to frighten me.

Not flirting.

Not touching.

Attention.

Then Mark left for Chicago, and the house softened.

Ethan and I painted the living room because I had bought the paint months earlier, back when I still believed small changes could make a house feel alive again. We moved the furniture, laid plastic over the floor, and spent the afternoon getting more paint on ourselves than on the walls.

When the white streak landed on my cheek, I laughed.

I remember that laugh because it startled me.

Ethan turned, smiled, and reached out before thinking. His thumb touched my cheek. Gentle. Quick. Ordinary, if my life had been ordinary.

But my life was not ordinary anymore.

The room went still.

His hand dropped.

“Sorry, Melissa,” he said. “I shouldn’t have.”

I told him it was fine.

He believed the word.

I did not.

That night, Mark called from his hotel and talked for seven minutes about delayed meetings.

I almost told him I missed him.

Then he said, “I have to run,” before I could find the courage.

Two days later, Mark flew to Seattle.

At least, that was what he told me.

The rain started on the third evening. I sat on the porch wrapped in a blanket, watching water bead along the railing. I was not crying. I was doing what I did most nights, making my loneliness look like a quiet preference.

Ethan came outside with two mugs.

He set one beside me and sat at the other end of the bench.

For a while, we only listened to the rain.

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