Pregnant On My Birthday, I Learned What My Neighbor Was Hiding-xurixuri

It was my twenty-eighth birthday, and the house smelled like vanilla dish soap, warm air, and the cardboard box of decorations I had pulled from the hall closet.

I remember that because terror makes strange things permanent.

It keeps the little details and burns away the rest.

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The porch boards were warm under my sandals when I stepped outside, and the late-evening humidity pressed against my face like a damp towel.

Somewhere down the block, somebody was grilling chicken.

A sprinkler clicked in a steady half-circle over a lawn that looked too perfect to be real.

I had one hand under my seven-month-pregnant belly and one hand holding a small paper banner that said “Happy Birthday” in bright letters.

It was not expensive.

It was not fancy.

It was the kind of thing you buy at the grocery store because you want one corner of the day to feel like it belongs to you.

Tom had gone out for cake.

He had kissed my temple before leaving, grabbed his keys from the bowl by the door, and said, “Chocolate, right?”

I told him chocolate.

Then I told him maybe vanilla.

Then he laughed and said he would text me from the cake aisle, because that was the kind of man he was.

He made room for my small indecisions.

He did not call them drama.

So I taped the banner to the porch rail and stepped back to look at it.

For about three seconds, I felt happy.

That was all I got.

Riverside had looked safe when Tom and I moved in three months earlier.

It had trimmed lawns, white fences, a tidy community center two houses down, and neighbors who waved from driveways with paper coffee cups in their hands.

It looked like the kind of place where people would bring soup when you were sick and tell you when your garage door was left open.

That was the advertisement.

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