A Mother Peeked Into A Hospital Room And Saw Her Husband’s Betrayal-thuyhien

My name is Megan Foster.

I used to think the worst thing that could happen to a mother would arrive loudly.

A crash.

A scream.

A phone call in the middle of the night.

I did not know it could arrive under fluorescent hospital lights, behind a door that had not fully latched, while a police officer whispered for me to look through the crack.

That morning had been ordinary enough to fool me.

The kitchen smelled like pancake batter, coffee, and the faint lemon soap I used on the counters when I was nervous about company.

Sunlight pushed through the window over the sink and landed across the tile in a clean yellow stripe.

Ashley’s backpack sat by the mudroom door with one strap twisted under it.

Her sneakers were in the middle of the laundry room again.

I remember those things because later I went over the whole day in my head so many times that even the smallest details felt like evidence.

“Ashley,” I called toward the stairs. “Are you awake?”

No answer.

I flipped a pancake and listened to it hiss.

“Ashley Foster, you have school in forty minutes.”

That got me a muffled sound from upstairs, the kind that could have been words or could have been a teenager fighting for her life against a pillow.

Daniel walked into the kitchen first.

He was already dressed for work, pale blue shirt, dark slacks, wedding ring catching the light as he adjusted one cuff.

“Morning, Meg,” he said.

He kissed my cheek the way he always did.

Quick.

Automatic.

Not cold enough for me to notice then.

He worked as a sales manager for an industrial cleaning equipment company, which meant early meetings, client dinners, long drives, airports, and the kind of schedule that made him seem overworked even when he was standing still.

I had trusted that schedule.

That was one of the first things I hated myself for later.

“Big presentation today?” I asked.

He took the coffee I handed him and smiled. “Important one. I’m a little nervous.”

“You’ll be fine,” I said. “You always are.”

Ashley came into the kitchen with her hoodie half-zipped and her hair pulled into a messy ponytail.

At fifteen, she was all elbows, sarcasm, and sudden softness.

She could roll her eyes at me for asking about homework and then leave half a muffin on my plate because she knew I liked the top.

She had Daniel’s chin and my habit of biting the inside of her cheek when she was thinking.

“Can I go to the mall after school?” she asked.

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