His Plastic Vase Made Her Quiet. Then Her Father’s Company Moved-iwachan

When I found the red lace underwear in my husband’s pocket, I did not cry.

That was the part that scared me.

For seven years, crying had been my body’s first language.

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I had cried in the kitchen with dish soap drying on my wrists.

I had cried in the driveway behind the wheel of my SUV because I did not want the neighbors to hear me through the walls.

I had cried into pillows, towels, laundry, and once into the sleeve of a sweater Michael later asked me to iron for a client dinner.

Every affair had its own little ceremony.

First came the discovery.

A perfume stain near his collar.

A strange receipt folded too carefully in his wallet.

A lipstick mark behind his ear.

A woman’s name flashing across his phone at 1:12 a.m., then disappearing before I could ask why a vendor was calling him from a heart emoji contact.

Then came me breaking something.

A wineglass against the kitchen wall.

A mug in the sink.

A cabinet door slammed so hard the hinge finally snapped and hung crooked for three months because Michael said repairs were a waste of money.

Then came his apology.

Never a full one.

Michael apologized the way some people close a browser window.

Quickly, cleanly, with no intention of remembering what had been open.

By morning, I was usually too exhausted to fight.

By breakfast, I was making eggs.

By lunch, I was texting him reminders he could have handled himself.

By dinner, we were pretending the house had not heard me falling apart.

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