When My Best Friend Confessed, My Phone Was Already Loaded-kieutrinh

Mara’s apartment smelled like red wine, lemon cleaner, and a candle that was trying too hard to make the room feel harmless.

The windows of her downtown Naperville apartment rattled softly whenever a car passed on the wet street below.

She had poured two glasses of wine before I arrived, even though she knew I rarely drank on weeknights.

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That should have told me something by itself.

Mara Bennett did not waste gestures.

She arranged them.

She stood on the other side of the kitchen island in soft jeans, a cream sweater, and bare feet, holding her glass like it was the only solid thing left in the room.

I remember the sound before I remember her words.

The little click of her wedding ring against the stem.

The hum of the refrigerator.

The faint rush of traffic.

My purse was on the counter, and my phone was face down beside it.

I had placed it there on purpose.

When a person thinks you do not know, they look at your empty hands and mistake your calm for weakness.

Mara took a breath and said, “Claire, I need to tell you something.”

The old me would have leaned forward.

The old me would have reached for her hand.

The old me had spent eleven years believing Mara’s pain was something I was supposed to protect.

That woman was still somewhere inside me, but she was no longer in charge.

“What is it?” I asked.

Mara looked at the floor, then at the wineglass, then at me.

Her face had the pale, careful look of someone who had practiced honesty but not consequences.

“It’s about Daniel.”

My husband’s name moved through the apartment like cold air under a door.

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