A Mother Saw Her Husband Holding Rachel’s Hand Beside The Evidence-thuyhien

My name is Megan Foster.

Before the hospital, before the police officer, before the little bottle in the evidence bag, my life looked ordinary enough that I trusted it.

That is what still makes me angry some days.

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Not that evil arrived wearing a mask.

It arrived carrying a coffee mug, asking about pancakes, and kissing me on the cheek before work.

We lived in a small house outside Boston with a driveway that cracked every winter and a laundry room that never stayed clean for more than six hours.

Ashley was fifteen, a sophomore, and full of the kind of restless teenage energy that made every room louder after she left it.

She left sneakers in the laundry room.

She drank orange juice straight from the carton when she thought I was not looking.

She texted with both thumbs faster than I could read one sentence.

She was my daughter, and she was still young enough that when she was sick, she wanted me first.

That morning began with pancake batter hissing on the griddle and coffee filling the kitchen.

The pale sunlight moved across the counter in thin stripes, catching the flour dust I had wiped badly with my sleeve.

“Ashley, are you up?” I called.

From upstairs came the kind of groan only a fifteen-year-old girl can make when her mother has committed the terrible crime of keeping time.

Daniel came down first.

He was fastening his cuffs, wearing the blue shirt he always wore when he had a presentation, his hair still damp from the shower.

“Morning, Meg,” he said.

He smiled that calm little smile of his.

I used to think that smile meant steadiness.

Later, I would understand it meant practice.

He worked as a sales manager for a company that sold industrial cleaning equipment, which meant he was gone more than I liked but never so much that it looked suspicious on paper.

Early meetings.

Client dinners.

Flights that were always just inconvenient enough to feel believable.

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