His Boss Exposed His Lie, Then His Credit Card Revealed More-felicia

The phone rang at 4:37 on Saturday afternoon, while Emily Parker was on her knees in the living room picking tiny plastic bricks out of the carpet.

The house smelled like peanut butter, lemon floor cleaner, and the burnt edge of the frozen pizza she had made for lunch.

Sunlight cut across the couch in dusty stripes, turning the ordinary mess of her home into something almost tender.

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A school bus groaned past the front window even though it was the weekend, and for one second she thought the sound was the strangest thing about that afternoon.

Then she answered the phone.

“Hello?”

“Mrs. Parker? Brian Collins. I’m Daniel’s manager.”

Emily froze with one little red brick pinched between her fingers.

“Oh. Hi, Brian. Is everything okay?”

“I’m sorry to bother you at home, but I’ve been trying to reach Daniel. He missed work yesterday and today, and he hasn’t returned any calls. Is he sick?”

The room went so quiet that the dryer in the laundry room sounded like a heart beating in another body.

Emily sat back on her heels.

“What do you mean he missed work?” she asked. “He left Friday morning saying he’d be tied up with work all weekend.”

There was a pause long enough to rearrange eight years of marriage.

“Ma’am,” Brian said carefully, “there hasn’t been any emergency project. Everyone left early Friday.”

Emily thanked him because manners are strange like that.

Even when your life starts cracking open, some old part of you still remembers to be polite.

Then she ended the call and stood in the middle of the living room with a toy brick in her hand.

For a few seconds, she did nothing.

The refrigerator hummed.

The dryer thumped.

A cartoon voice chirped from the television where Lily had left the volume too low.

Then Emily started laughing.

It was not happy laughter.

It was not hysterical laughter either.

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