A Wife Found Powder in Her Soup. Then the 3 AM Hospital Call Came-olive

The night Valerie Peterson tried to poison me, Chicago felt like it had been wrapped in cotton.

The city was not silent, exactly, but everything sounded muffled and far away.

A bus groaned somewhere beyond our block.

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Wind moved through the alley behind our building and dragged loose paper against the brick.

Inside our old pre-war apartment, the radiator gave off a tired metallic hiss that had become the soundtrack of my marriage.

I had just come home from a double shift at the hospital pharmacy.

Thirteen hours of white tile, fluorescent light, patient names, allergy alerts, controlled-substance counts, and doctors who changed orders without reading the previous note had left my body feeling hollow.

My hair was crushed flat under my wool hat.

My feet ached inside clogs I used to swear were comfortable.

My hands smelled like antiseptic, nitrile gloves, and crushed tablets.

That smell had followed me for years.

Sometimes, even after a shower, I could still catch it under my fingernails, as if the hospital had stitched itself into my skin.

I worked at Northwestern Memorial, in a unit where small errors could become funerals.

That made me careful.

It also made people underestimate how much I noticed.

My husband, Derek, used to joke that I could identify medication by smell before the label printed.

My father had said something less flattering and more accurate.

“You have the nose of a bloodhound and the patience of a coroner,” he told me once.

I thought of him that night.

I thought of him because all I wanted was soup.

Not comfort.

Not love.

Not one of the conversations Derek had been avoiding for months.

Just chicken noodle, extra broth, black pepper, no celery, from the little diner three blocks away.

I had ordered it through DoorDash because I was too tired to boil water.

The driver texted at 1:07 a.m. that he had left the bag outside our door.

I saw the notification while standing in the kitchen beside a sink full of cups Derek had promised to wash.

I decided to take the trash down first.

That was the kind of thing I did automatically.

I wiped counters.

I folded Derek’s shirts.

I replaced the toilet paper roll.

I pretended not to notice when my husband lied badly.

Marriage teaches some women partnership.

Mine had taught me inventory.

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