He Found His Pregnant Wife in the Dark, Then Heard the Call-Ginny

The night I came home early from a business trip, I thought I was doing something sweet.

I thought I was being the kind of husband who still remembered how to surprise his wife.

I had been gone for three days, sleeping in a hotel room that smelled like old air conditioning and industrial detergent.

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Every morning started with burnt conference coffee in a paper cup and ended with me staring at pictures of Clara on my phone.

There was one photo I kept opening more than the others.

She was standing beside our apartment window in one of my old T-shirts, one hand on the round curve of her belly, smiling like she had just heard a secret from the baby.

That was Clara.

Gentle in a way that never felt weak.

Tired, lately, but still making jokes about how our child apparently believed her ribs were a punching bag.

I had left town on Monday morning.

My return flight was supposed to be Friday evening.

But on Thursday afternoon, at 4:30 p.m., my final meeting ended early.

The client signed the last document, everyone shook hands, and the room emptied into the hallway with the flat, relieved chatter of people who had pretended to enjoy each other for too long.

I checked flights before I even left the building.

There was one seat left.

I bought it.

For the rest of that day, I carried the surprise around like a little flame.

I pictured Clara opening the apartment door and blinking at me.

I pictured her laughing, one hand over her mouth, then stepping into my arms carefully because her belly had made hugging a negotiation.

I pictured myself pressing my palm against her stomach and whispering, “Hey, kid. I made it home.”

I did not picture blood.

I did not picture broken glass.

I did not picture the first minute of my return becoming the minute I would regret for the rest of my life.

The flight landed just before 10:00 p.m.

The airport was half-empty, all shiny floors and tired faces under fluorescent lights.

I grabbed my carry-on, ignored the line for taxis, and paid too much for a ride home because I wanted those extra minutes.

The driver had a radio station playing softly up front.

The city slid by in dark windows, gas stations, closed storefronts, and traffic lights blinking red over empty intersections.

I texted Clara once, then deleted it before sending.

No warning.

That was the whole point.

At our apartment complex, the little American flag taped inside the leasing office window moved every time the lobby door opened.

I noticed it because the night was windy, and because ordinary things always become sharp in memory after something terrible happens.

The mailbox wall hummed with the building’s old fluorescent light.

Somebody had left a grocery bag near the recycling bins.

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