She Found Red Lace in His Pocket, Then Let the Papers Speak-chloe

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

That was the part that frightened me.

For seven years, crying had been the first thing my body knew how to do in that house.

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Crying came before words.

It came before anger.

It came before any sentence clear enough to defend me.

A lipstick mark on Michael’s collar would send me shaking into the kitchen, clutching the shirt like it had burned my fingers.

A perfume stain near his shoulder would make me stand in front of the sink until the water ran cold over my wrists.

A receipt from a restaurant he swore he had never visited would end with me throwing a wineglass against the tile backsplash while he watched me with that calm, patient, insulting face.

He always waited for the storm to wear itself out.

That was his gift.

Not kindness.

Timing.

Michael never had to win the argument if he could simply outlast the woman having it.

By morning, I would be hoarse, ashamed, exhausted, and standing at the stove again.

He liked his eggs over medium.

I used to make them without thinking.

That morning, the laundry room smelled like dryer sheets, cedar soap, and the sour little dampness that hides in collars if shirts sit too long in the washer.

The machine clicked behind me.

The May light came in through the small window over the shelf and fell in a pale square across the floor.

I had his navy dress pants in my left hand.

In my right hand was the red lace.

It was smaller than I expected betrayal to be.

That was the ridiculous thought that came to me first.

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