He Found His Wife Collapsed While His Mother Ate Dinner Beside Her-Lian

The baby’s scream reached me before I unlocked the front door.

It was not the normal newborn cry I had been learning to understand in those first blurred weeks of fatherhood.

It was sharper than hunger.

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It was the kind of cry that makes every thought in your head stop at once.

I stood on our porch with my keys in my hand, the little American flag by the railing snapping in the cold afternoon wind, and smelled something burning through the door.

Chicken grease.

Rice stuck to the bottom of a pot.

A hot, sour smell that did not belong with the sound of a baby screaming.

I dropped my keys on the entry table so hard they slid across the wood and hit the wall.

Then I ran.

Our living room was too bright for how wrong it felt.

The blinds were half-open, letting winter daylight spill across the carpet.

A laundry basket sat near the couch with tiny onesies folded on one side and spilling over on the other.

Three bottles were lined up on the kitchen counter like Clara had been trying to prepare for a day she did not have the strength to survive.

The pot on the stove had boiled over.

Water hissed under the burner.

Our son was in his bassinet near the sofa, red-faced and trembling, fists opening and closing as if he had been begging the room to become human.

And Clara was on the sofa.

Not asleep.

Not resting.

Collapsed.

One arm hung off the cushion.

Her face had gone the pale gray color I had only seen once before, when a nurse rushed into our hospital room after Clara’s blood pressure dropped too fast.

Her lips were dry.

Her hair was stuck to her temple.

Her shirt clung damply to her skin.

At the dining table, my mother sat with a full plate in front of her.

Roast chicken.

Rice.

Vegetables.

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