After 17 Years of His Cruel Joke, Their Daughter Heard Enough-lbsuong

The first time Mike joked about leaving me for Sarah, I was twenty-eight years old and still young enough to think embarrassment could be laughed away if I smiled quickly enough.

There was a birthday cake in front of me, a “28” candle bent slightly from the heat, and smoke curling above the frosting like a tiny warning no one wanted to read.

Mike had a beer in his hand and that easy, public grin he used whenever he wanted everyone to know he was joking before anyone had the chance to decide he was cruel.

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“If Sarah ever gave me a chance, I’d leave my wife instantly,” he said.

The room did not laugh the way happy rooms laugh.

It gave off a broken, nervous sound, the kind people make when they understand something is wrong but do not want the inconvenience of naming it.

I stood beside my own cake and smiled because my face knew the old routine before my dignity could object.

Sarah did not smile.

She had been my best friend since childhood, and that sentence meant more than people understood when they heard it at parties.

Sarah knew the house where I grew up, the cracked linoleum in my mother’s kitchen, the exact cabinet where we hid snacks after school, and the name of every boy who had disappointed me before Mike learned how to.

She had been beside me when I married him.

She had held Madison the week after she was born, when I was exhausted and afraid and pretending the baby blues were just lack of sleep.

She had brought soup, folded laundry, and once sat on my bathroom floor while I cried because I thought I was failing at being a wife and a mother at the same time.

That was the trust Mike kept dragging into his little performance.

He did not choose a stranger for his joke.

He chose the woman I trusted most.

“Enough, Mike,” Sarah said that night, her voice low but firm. “That’s not funny.”

Mike lifted both hands as if she had embarrassed him instead of the other way around.

“Relax,” he said. “It’s just a joke.”

That became the phrase I heard for 17 years.

It’s just a joke.

He said it on Christmas Eve when he told Sarah she looked more like his type than I ever had.

He said it at a summer barbecue when he asked if she had finally gotten bored enough to run away with him.

He said it during a family dinner when Madison was still small enough to sit in a booster seat and big enough to understand the word wife.

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