He Told His Wife To Take A Taxi While He Picked Up Another Woman-kieutrinh

The arrivals hall smelled like burnt coffee, wet wool coats, floor cleaner, and the recycled chill of people who had spent too many hours in airports pretending not to be tired.

Angela Mercer stood beside the baggage carousel with her burgundy suitcase upright at her knee, one hand wrapped around the handle and the other closed around her phone so tightly her fingers had started to ache.

For two weeks, she had carried one small picture in her mind.

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Michael would be waiting near the glass doors.

He would be in the dark blue jacket she bought him last fall, the one he said made him look more put together for work.

He would smile when he saw her, not with the big performative smile he gave neighbors and clients, but with the private one she used to believe belonged only to her.

He would take the suitcase from her hand and say, “Finally. The house has been too quiet without you.”

Angela had imagined it on the train to the airport that morning.

She had imagined it while waiting in the security line behind a family with too many backpacks.

She had imagined it while the plane dipped through low gray clouds and rain started streaking across the window.

A person can survive a lot of disappointment by rehearsing one gentle moment.

Then her phone rang.

Michael’s name filled the screen.

Angela smiled before she answered because she still had that habit, the old reflex of being glad to hear from him before remembering all the reasons that gladness had grown tired.

“Hey,” she said, looking toward the sliding doors.

“Baby, I’m so sorry,” Michael said.

His voice was warm, rushed, and polished smooth.

Angela knew that voice.

It was the one he used when he wanted a sentence to pass quickly before anyone could examine it.

“I’m stuck in this meeting,” he said. “It ran over. Just grab a taxi, okay? I’ll make it up to you tonight.”

Angela did not answer right away.

The baggage carousel groaned to life beside her, and the first suitcase dropped onto the belt with a hard rubber thump.

Around her, people were finding each other.

A little boy ran full speed into his father’s arms near the railing.

An older woman in a cream coat cried into somebody’s shoulder and laughed through it, the way people do when relief embarrasses them.

A driver held a cardboard sign with a last name written in black marker.

The whole room seemed full of reunions, and Angela stood in the middle of it alone, listening to her husband cancel the one thing he had promised.

“You said you’d be here,” she said.

“I know,” Michael replied fast. “I know, and I feel terrible. Henderson’s team just will not stop talking. You know how these people are. Grab a cab. It’s twenty minutes. I’ll have dinner ready.”

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