The Anniversary Lunch That Turned An Office Against A Pregnant Wife-xurixuri

Teresa Sandoval told me to open the container and eat it in front of everyone.

She said it from my own office chair, with her purse sitting on my desk and the morning light making a hard square on the carpet.

The hallway outside my office had gone unusually quiet.

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People at a food-distribution company learn to keep moving, because there is always a driver waiting, a freezer alarm going off, a grocery chain asking where its order is, or a warehouse supervisor calling from a loading dock with bad news.

But that morning, the air stopped.

The smell from the thermal delivery box sat heavy in the room.

Seafood, butter, truffle oil, warm plastic, and the faint burnt-coffee smell that never really left the printer station outside my door.

I was fourteen weeks pregnant, and I had spent the last twenty minutes trying not to throw up again.

Nobody knew that.

Not my assistant.

Not my mother-in-law.

Not even my husband, Daniel.

That was the part that made me feel like a coward every time I touched my stomach in an empty restroom or stood in our apartment kitchen at night, waiting for him to come home.

My name is Emily Carter, and at work, I was not treated like someone fragile.

I was the operations director.

I handled refrigerated semis that broke down on the interstate at three in the morning.

I approved emergency repairs when a walk-in freezer dropped temperature before dawn.

I called drivers, vendors, grocery buyers, warehouse leads, and insurance people in one long chain until the problem was contained and the numbers stopped bleeding.

That was my job.

At the company, people came to me when something expensive was about to go wrong.

At home, and in the Sandoval family, I was expected to become very small.

Daniel Sandoval was my husband of four years and the CEO of the company.

He looked like the kind of man business magazines love to photograph near a window.

Tailored suit.

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