My Landlord’s Wife Showed Up With A Pregnancy Test — She Didn’t Know I Had His Voice Recorded-thuyhien

The plastic stick in Mrs. Calloway’s hand caught the yellow porch light and turned it chalk-white. The bulb above our door buzzed like it had a loose wire. Somebody on the second-floor walkway stopped mid-step. Down in the parking lot, a truck radio kept playing low country music, but up in our breezeway nobody moved. My church tote was still hanging from my wrist. Michael’s duffel lay on the floor behind me. I could smell fried onions from Apartment 3B, old concrete still holding the heat of the day, and the sharp powder-clean scent of Mrs. Calloway’s cardigan as she leaned closer and waited for me to answer.

“The baby is not your husband’s,” I said.

My voice came out steadier than my knees felt.

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Mrs. Calloway’s eyes narrowed. “Then why was your earring in his bedroom?”

Behind me, Michael made a sound through his nose, short and rough, like his chest had locked around it.

There was a time Michael could make a room feel bigger just by walking into it.

When we first got married, he drove airport runs in a black sedan with leather seats he wiped down every night with the same blue towel. He used to come pick me up after parent-teacher nights with a fountain Dr Pepper sweating in the cup holder and my favorite gas-station peanut M&M’s in the console. We didn’t have much then either, but he laughed easily. He would stand behind me at our stove on Calhoun Street, chin on my shoulder, stealing strips of bell pepper from the cutting board while I cooked. On Sundays he ironed his church shirts with his jaw tight and his music too loud, and afterward we would sit on folding chairs outside our first apartment, splitting a peach from the produce stand and talking about a house with a yard big enough for a swing set.

The first time I told him I wanted a baby, he touched my stomach with the flat of his hand like he was checking for something sacred under the skin. He said, “Let me get us stable first.”

For a while, he meant it.

Then the layoffs hit his company last fall. The airport routes dried up. One contract ended. Then another. His sedan got repossessed in January. He started chasing commercial driving jobs all over Houston, then Conroe, then Baytown, then back again, his resume folded soft in the glove compartment of a borrowed truck. At first he still came home talking. Then he came home tired. Then he started parking two streets over just to sit with the engine off before he walked inside. The mini bottles came after that. Cinnamon whiskey. Cheap vodka. Plastic caps in the cup holder. He kept calling it taking the edge off. I kept counting my paycheck into piles on the table and pretending numbers could stretch if I pressed them flat enough.

Even then, there were flashes of the man I married. He changed his mother’s sheets when her knees swelled so badly she couldn’t stand. He drove me to school at 6:40 a.m. one rainy Thursday because my battery died and waited in the lot until my principal came outside to boost the car. He rubbed my calves one night when I fell asleep grading spelling tests on the couch. Then the next morning he sold my old gold chain without asking and said he thought I’d understand.

That was how our life had started breaking. Not in one clean snap. In little thefts. Little silences. Little humiliations stacked on top of each other until the whole thing leaned.

Standing there in that breezeway with Mrs. Calloway’s question hanging between us, my cheek still hot where the envelope had hit, I could feel everything at once. The sting along my skin. The ache in my throat from swallowing too fast. The dragging weight low in my belly that had followed me for three mornings straight. My fingers locked around the tote straps so hard the canvas bit into my palm. I wanted to fold over. I wanted to throw up. I wanted to go back two hours and tell Michael about the clinic paper already tucked in the side pocket before the money, before the shouting, before he looked at me like I had tracked something filthy into our home.

At 10:15 that same morning, I had been sitting on a paper-covered exam table at a women’s clinic off Richmond Avenue with my handbag in my lap and my knees pressed together under a thin gown. The room smelled like hand sanitizer and printer toner. A nurse with lavender scrubs and tired eyes told me I was seven weeks and four days pregnant. She slid a packet across the counter with vitamins, appointment dates, and one black-and-white ultrasound image no bigger than a receipt. I stared at the tiny gray oval until the edges of the paper went damp under my fingers. I had pictured telling Michael after dinner. Maybe with the clinic bracelet still in my purse and the ultrasound tucked inside his job letter once he showed it to me, because I had been so sure he would come home with good news that day. I even stopped at Dollar Tree after work and bought a blue gift bag with silver tissue paper. It was still under the sink.

Mrs. Calloway took one step closer. “I asked you a question.”

“I heard you.”

I reached into the tote and felt past my Bible, the crumpled envelope, the clinic packet, and the phone. Michael shifted behind me. I could feel his stare between my shoulder blades.

“The earring was in your husband’s bedroom because your husband tried to buy access to my body with my rent notice on his desk.”

The words landed flat and hard on the concrete.

Mrs. Calloway’s mouth opened, then shut. “Watch yourself.”

“I already did.”

I pulled out the phone.

Eight days earlier, after the three-day notice went up on our door, I had gone downstairs to Mr. Calloway’s office at 7:18 p.m. The maintenance man had already left. The vending machine in the laundry room was humming through the wall. My school counselor had told me that morning, after I asked a question I tried to make sound hypothetical, “If you ever walk into a room with a man who has power over your housing, your job, or your body, turn on your recorder before you sit down.”

So I did.

His office smelled like old coffee and peppermint gum. He kept a fake ficus in one corner and a framed photo of himself in a fishing vest behind the desk. When I walked in, he looked at my notice, looked at my chest, and reached over to close the blinds with two quick pulls.

“You don’t need to be nervous,” he said.

I never sat down.

He tapped the amount due with one thick finger. “Two thousand four hundred by Friday, or I file. But there are other ways adults solve problems.”

He took out an envelope. Same size. Same crease down the middle.

I said, “I’m asking for one more week.”

He smiled without showing teeth.

“One week doesn’t buy you anything. An hour with me does.”

I remember the texture of the carpet under my shoes. I remember the little click his pen made when he set it down. I remember how my right earring snagged when I turned too fast and his knuckle brushed the side of my neck.

I got out of that room with the envelope shoved into my tote and one hoop missing.

I did not spend a dollar of it.

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