I Came Home With Soup for My Sick Husband and Heard the Plan-thuyhien

I slipped back home on my lunch break to check on my sick husband.

I had tomato soup in a paper bag, a bottle of ginger ale tucked under my arm, and exactly forty-three minutes before I needed to be back at the office.

What I did not have was any idea that my marriage had already been converted into paperwork.

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When Ethan said, very quietly, “I’ll call you back.

I think she’s home,” something inside me went perfectly still.

The panic did not disappear.

It sharpened.

I stepped backward without making a sound and moved into the kitchen just as he came around the corner from the living room, phone lowered, face arranged into surprise.

“Claire?” he said, and if I had not heard the call, I might have believed the concern in his voice.

“What are you doing here?”

I set the paper bag on the counter very carefully.

“I came to check on you,” I said.

The lie in the room was so large we both had to step around it.

He coughed once. It was a pathetic little performance, rushed and unconvincing.

“You didn’t have to do that.”

“I know.”

I looked at him. Really looked.

No fever glaze. No heaviness in his eyes.

No weakness in his body.

He was healthy enough to pace and scheme and move money around behind my back.

And still, some stupid tender part of me noticed that his hair was sticking up in the back the way it always did when he had run his hand through it too many times.

Love has terrible timing.

“So,” I said, keeping my voice even, “who were you talking to?”

His face barely changed, but I saw the flicker.

“Work. Neal from IT. Something’s wrong with the server migration.”

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