I was still sitting at the kitchen island, pretending to review invoices on my laptop.
She paused for half a second when she saw me.
“You’re up?”
I closed the laptop slowly. “Long night?”
She smiled too fast. “Lena’s birthday went late. You know how those things are.”
Then she leaned in to kiss my cheek, and the scent hit me fully.
It wasn’t mine.
My stomach tightened instantly, like a sudden cramp. For ten years, I had known every detail of my wife, Claire Benson. The vanilla hand cream she used in winter. The lemon shampoo she bought from that boutique near Georgetown. The light floral perfume she wore on anniversaries and court days. Claire was precise, polished, almost impossible to surprise. She was a corporate attorney, and even her chaos had structure.
This smell didn’t belong in our life.
“You okay?” she asked.
“Yeah,” I said. “Just tired.”
She nodded and went upstairs. I waited until I heard the bathroom door close before standing. Her coat was draped over a dining chair. I picked it up, felt the lingering chill in the fabric, and brought the collar closer.