He Came Home Early And Found His Wife Bleeding By The Deed Papers-hothiyenvy_5

I came home two days early with almond cookies for my wife and found her on the living room floor with blood running down her face.

The first sound I heard after that was my son laughing in the kitchen.

The transportation conference had wrapped ahead of schedule, and I did what most husbands do when the work trip ends early and the house is only three hours away.

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I got in the car and drove home.

I did not call Sarah first because I wanted to surprise her.

At 5:18 p.m. on a Friday, I pulled into our driveway with my conference badge still clipped to my shirt, a bottle of red wine on the passenger seat, and a white bakery box of almond cookies beside it.

Sarah liked those cookies because they reminded her of the ones her mother used to buy at the little bakery near the beach house.

That beach house had become the sore spot in our family, though I did not know how ugly it had gotten until the moment I opened my own front door.

The bakery box had left sugar dust on my fingertips.

The late-May heat was still sitting in the driveway, and the steering wheel had been warm under my hands all the way home.

Our screen door scraped when I pulled it open, making the same dry sound I had promised myself I would fix for three summers and never did.

Inside, the hallway smelled like lemon cleaner.

Sarah always cleaned on Fridays, even when I told her the house did not have to look ready for company every second of the week.

Under that clean smell was something sharper.

Metallic.

Coppery.

Wrong.

I took two steps into the living room and saw my wife on the floor.

Sarah was sitting with her back against the beige sofa, her knees bent, one hand pressed hard over her right eyebrow.

Blood had slipped between her fingers and down the side of her face.

It had marked the collar of her cream blouse and dotted the Persian-style rug we bought after our twentieth anniversary, back when spending money on something pretty still felt like a little act of faith.

For one second, my mind refused to understand what my eyes were seeing.

Then Sarah looked up at me.

She did not look relieved.

She looked embarrassed, as if I had walked in on something shameful she had caused instead of something that had been done to her.

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