He Said Divorce At Dawn—Then Forgot What His Wife Used To Do-yumihong

At 4:30 in the morning, the front door opened with the soft click I used to know by heart.

That sound had once meant Mark was home.

That morning, it meant something else had walked into my kitchen wearing his suit.

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The tile was cold under my bare feet, and the whole room smelled like bacon grease, burned coffee, and the little sour sweetness of a baby bottle that had been sitting too long in hot water.

Our two-month-old son was asleep against my chest.

His breath dampened my T-shirt every few seconds, warm and tiny, while I stood at the stove making breakfast for Mark’s parents and his sister.

They were coming at eight.

His sister had texted at 1:17 a.m. to remind me that his mother liked her eggs soft and her toast dry.

She did not ask whether I had slept.

She did not ask whether the baby had finally stopped crying.

She sent the message like a work order.

I remember looking at that text with one hand on the baby’s back and one hand on the coffee pot, thinking I had become invisible so slowly that I had not noticed when it happened.

Then Mark’s key scraped in the lock.

The refrigerator hummed.

The pan hissed.

The porch flag outside tapped softly in the wind, a tiny sound through the kitchen window.

I turned my head just enough to see him step inside.

His navy suit was wrinkled at the elbows, his tie loose, his hair damp from the fog.

He looked at the table first.

Folded napkins.

Clean plates.

Mugs lined up for coffee.

Toast cooling on a paper towel.

Then he looked at the baby.

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