He Said Divorce At Dawn, Forgetting What His Wife Used To Do-heyily

The front door opened at 4:30 in the morning, and the sound of Mark’s key in the lock went through me before the cold did.

I was standing barefoot on the kitchen tile with our two-month-old son tucked against my chest, his breath damp and warm through the stretched cotton of my old T-shirt.

The stove was on.

Image

The coffee had burned.

A baby bottle sat in a mug of water beside the sink, giving off that sour-sweet smell new mothers know too well, the one that means you forgot one small thing because twenty other small things were screaming for you first.

Bacon grease hung in the room like a film.

Outside the window, the street was still dark, with only the neighbor’s porch light and the little flag on our railing moving in the fog.

I had been awake since midnight.

Our son had cried until his voice went hoarse, then hiccupped himself to sleep against my collarbone while I bounced him with one arm and flipped bacon with the other.

Mark’s parents were due at eight.

His sister had sent a text at 1:17 a.m. reminding me that their mother liked her eggs soft and her toast dry.

She wrote it like I was a hotel breakfast station.

She did not ask if the baby was sleeping.

She did not ask if I was okay.

I remember reading that text while rocking back and forth in the kitchen, telling myself that marriage required patience, that new motherhood made every insult feel bigger, that maybe one day they would see me as family instead of the woman who knew where the serving plates were kept.

That was the story I had been telling myself for a long time.

Then Mark walked in.

He wore the navy suit he kept for client dinners, the one I had picked up from the dry cleaner two days earlier with the baby strapped to my chest and a diaper bag sliding off my shoulder.

His tie was loose.

His hair was damp from the fog.

There was a smell on him that did not belong to our house, something sharp and expensive under the rain and city air.

He looked first at the table.

Six plates.

Six napkins.

A stack of forks.

The coffee pot.

The pan still hissing on the stove.

Then he looked at me, and I knew.

Some wives know from lipstick.

Some know from a missing receipt.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *