Pregnant Wife Served Dinner, Then Took Back Her Husband’s Company-kieutrinh

Linda knew the soup was too hot to carry with one hand, so she used both.

That was the kind of thing nobody at Peter’s family dinner would ever notice.

They would notice the table setting if one fork sat too far from a plate, and Cassandra would notice if the chicken had less rosemary than she preferred, but no one would notice the pregnant woman moving slowly through the kitchen with her lower back burning.

Image

Linda had been cooking for six hours by then.

She had peeled, chopped, stirred, and cleaned between waves of nausea, stopping only when the baby kicked hard enough to make her grip the counter and breathe through her teeth.

Peter had asked for the dinner three days earlier, leaning in the bathroom doorway while she folded towels and telling her it would mean a lot if she made his family feel welcome.

He said welcome like she was part of it.

That was why she said yes.

She still remembered the early years, when Peter came home tired and grateful, when they ate pasta from chipped bowls in a rented apartment and made plans so big they had to whisper them because saying them loudly felt dangerous.

Back then, he had called her brilliant.

Back then, he had meant it.

The house filled just after seven, and with it came the familiar sound of Peter’s family taking ownership of every room.

Cassandra arrived first in pearls and a cream blouse, kissing Peter on both cheeks before giving Linda’s stomach a glance that looked more like inspection than affection.

Aunt Denise came with Uncle Ray, who still had enough kindness left in him to ask Linda if she needed help.

Linda smiled and told him she was fine, because Peter was watching from the doorway with the tight face he wore whenever her discomfort might embarrass him.

Then Nicole walked in.

She did not knock like a guest.

She floated through the front door in a red dress and heels, carrying a covered dish in both hands, with Peter behind her smiling like a man relieved that the better version of his life had finally arrived.

Linda saw the way Nicole touched the back of Peter’s chair before she saw the food.

That small touch was worse than an announcement.

It said she knew where she belonged.

It said Linda did not.

Peter cleared his throat when Linda stepped from the kitchen with the soup tray.

“Don’t serve that,” he said, not loudly enough to sound cruel, but clearly enough for everyone to hear.

Linda stopped at the edge of the table.

Steam rose from the bowls and blurred her view for one second, which almost felt merciful.

“We already have something better,” Peter added.

Nicole lifted the lid from her casserole with a soft little laugh.

“I brought real food,” she said.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *