He Bought Gifts For Another Woman. His Wife Left One Envelope.-olive

My name is Adrian Caldwell, and the worst day of my marriage did not begin with an argument.

It began with a lie I had practiced so often that it sounded normal in my own mouth.

That morning, the bottle warmer hummed in the kitchen while a pale strip of Texas light came through the living room blinds.

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The whole house smelled faintly of baby lotion, coffee that had gone cold, and the clean cotton burp cloths Lauren had folded at 3:42 a.m. because she could not fall back asleep after feeding our daughter.

Lauren sat on the couch with Maisie against her chest.

Maisie was two months old, small enough that her whole body seemed to rise and fall with one soft breath.

One tiny hand rested near Lauren’s collarbone.

Lauren’s hair was tied back in a loose knot that had probably started neat the night before.

Her eyes were tired in a way I had learned to recognize and then, shamefully, learned to ignore.

There was a basket of baby laundry near the stairs.

A bottle sat on the coffee table.

A pink pacifier clip lay beside a folded cloth.

Everything in that room was evidence that my wife had been awake for hours while I had been sleeping beside her like rest was something I deserved more than she did.

Still, she smiled when she looked at me.

“You’ll be home for dinner, right?” she asked.

I was near the front door, fixing my cuffs, pretending the day ahead belonged to work.

“Of course,” I said. “I just have a few things to finish at work.”

Lauren nodded right away.

She did not squint.

She did not ask which meeting.

She did not make me prove anything.

That was how much trust I still had that morning.

I had enough to spend it recklessly.

At 8:17 a.m., I backed out of our driveway while Lauren stood at the front window holding Maisie.

A small American flag on our porch barely moved in the cool morning air.

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