Her Husband Asked for a DNA Test. His Reason Destroyed the Marriage-eirian

The first thing I remember about that Thursday night in early September is the smell of peanut butter.

Not the accusation.

Not Nathan’s face.

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Not even Derek’s name appearing on my husband’s phone like a stain.

Peanut butter, apple slices, and lemon dish soap.

I had been packing lunches for Ava and Eli, our seven-year-old twins, in the kitchen of our suburban Columbus, Ohio, home.

Ava liked turkey cut diagonally and grapes in the blue container.

Eli liked ham, no mustard, and the dinosaur napkin if I remembered to pull one from the bottom of the drawer.

Upstairs, they were arguing over the fish.

Ava insisted it was her turn to feed it.

Eli insisted Ava had fed it the night before and was trying to “steal fish points,” which was not a thing in any official sense but had become one in their little private government.

The house was ordinary that night.

Painfully ordinary.

The dishwasher clicked as it changed cycles.

The refrigerator hummed beside Nathan.

A thin bar of light spilled from the hallway onto the kitchen floor.

Nathan stood near the refrigerator with his phone in one hand and an expression I knew too well.

It was the expression he wore when he wanted to say something ugly without being held responsible for the ugliness.

Careful voice.

Soft eyes.

Shoulders lowered like he was approaching a nervous animal.

“Don’t get upset,” he said.

I remember laughing once.

Not because it was funny.

Because any sentence that begins that way is already carrying a weapon.

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