He Found His Pregnant Wife at the Sink. Then Her Pills Were Gone- galacy

The television was loud enough to hear from the driveway.

The front porch light was on, the small American flag by the door moving gently in the warm Texas night, and his paper coffee cup had gone cold in the cup holder sometime between Dallas and Frisco.

He had spent fourteen hours in a software consulting office where every problem arrived labeled urgent.

By the time he stepped inside, his shoulders hurt, his tie felt like it had been tightening all day, and all he wanted was to see his wife.

Instead, the first thing he smelled was takeout grease.

Then perfume.

Then lemon dish soap.

That last smell pulled his eyes toward the kitchen.

Olivia was standing at the sink.

Eight months pregnant.

Barefoot.

One hand supporting the weight of their unborn son while the other scraped at a baking pan that looked like it had been abandoned on purpose.

The water was cloudy with soap.

Dirty plates leaned against the faucet.

A frying pan sat on the counter with hardened grease cooling in a gray ring.

Her oversized T-shirt hung from her shoulders and carried pale bleach stains along the bottom.

Ethan stood in the hallway, not moving, because for a few seconds his mind refused to arrange the scene correctly.

The living room was only a few steps away.

His mother, Diane Carter, sat in the recliner with a blanket over her knees and a smoothie in her hand.

His sister Vanessa scrolled through designer handbags on the phone he had bought her after graduation.

Courtney laughed at videos on her tablet.

Madison was complaining because her food delivery had arrived without extra sauce.

Burger wrappers, milkshake cups, and fries were spread across the coffee table like the room belonged to teenagers after a party instead of adults in a grown man’s home.

Ethan paid for that home.

He paid for the streaming accounts.

He paid for the phones.

He paid the insurance, the utilities, the groceries, the delivery charges, the subscription boxes, and all the little luxuries everyone had stopped thanking him for.

He had told himself that was what family did.

He had told himself that because it was easier than noticing who kept benefiting from his guilt.

“Where’s Olivia?” he asked.

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