Pregnant Wife Forced to Scrub Bleach While Mother Ate Grapes-olive

The bleach reached me before the room did.

It struck the back of my throat with a sharp chemical bite, so strong it cut through the sweetness of the white roses under my arm and the clean cotton smell of the newborn sleeper in the Baby Gap bag hanging from my fingers.

For one second, I thought something had spilled.

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For one second, I was still just a husband who had come home early.

Late afternoon sunlight lay across the marble floor in long bright strips, making every expensive thing in the house shine as if polish could pass for peace.

Then I saw Audrey.

My wife was on her knees in the middle of our living room.

She was seven months pregnant.

Her sleeves were shoved above her elbows, and both hands were buried in a yellow plastic bucket of bleach water.

The skin from her wrists to her elbows was angry red, raw in places, shining wet where the chemicals had eaten at her.

Loose strands of hair clung to her damp cheeks.

Her shoulders moved in tiny mechanical jerks as she scrubbed the marble floor with a sponge, as though someone had taken the word no from her mouth and punished her for ever learning it.

Across from her, my mother sat in Audrey’s favorite blue chair and ate red grapes from a cut-crystal bowl.

Vivian Whitmore did not look frightened when she saw me.

She looked annoyed.

Beside her sat Denise Calloway, the private maternity nurse my mother had insisted we hire after Audrey’s blood pressure scare at twenty-six weeks.

Denise wore beige scrubs, had a clipboard on her lap, and held a silver pen between two fingers.

She had the kind of calm that is supposed to reassure people.

In that room, it looked like a costume.

Nobody moved.

My mother did not uncross her ankles.

Denise did not put down the pen.

Audrey did not even release the sponge, though her eyes had found me and widened with something worse than embarrassment.

It was fear.

The roses slipped from my arm and scattered across the marble.

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