At 3:11 A.M., Her Husband’s Mistress Answered While She Labored-Quieen - Chainityai

At 3:11 A.M., Her Husband’s Mistress Answered While She Labored-Quieen

At 3:07 in the morning, the rain made the whole house sound surrounded.

It came at the windows sideways, hard enough to rattle the glass and turn the streetlight beyond the driveway into one blurry yellow smear.

The bedroom was cold because I had kicked off the comforter sometime after midnight, and the air smelled like laundry detergent, damp wood, and the lavender lotion I had rubbed over my stomach before trying to sleep.

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I was thirty-eight weeks pregnant, which meant sleep was no longer sleep so much as a collection of uncomfortable positions interrupted by heartburn, bathroom trips, and the baby pressing his foot into my ribs like he was testing the walls of the only home he knew.

Ryan was not beside me.

His side of the bed was flat and untouched, the pillow still squared up the way he left it, because Ryan did everything with the same neat little military precision.

His watch sat in its box on the dresser.

His boots were by the garage door.

His phone charger was plugged in beside the nightstand like a promise he had every intention of keeping.

He had left around ten that night after a long shower, coming into the bedroom with wet hair, a dark green jacket over his arm, and the faint smell of cedar soap still clinging to him.

“Emergency training drill,” he said.

He said it the same way he said every duty-related thing, calm and clipped, like the words themselves were supposed to settle any concern before it could form.

I was used to that life.

I was used to dinners going cold, weekends changing without warning, and holidays being planned around a schedule that seemed to belong to everyone except our family.

Military life did not always respect calendars.

It did not respect sleep.

Apparently, it did not respect a wife who had to roll sideways just to get out of bed.

Still, I did not argue when he told me he had to go.

I stood by the dresser in my oversized nightgown, one hand under my belly, watching him check his pockets for keys, wallet, gum, and the little black notebook he carried everywhere.

The hospital bag was already zipped by the bedroom door.

The intake folder was on the dresser.

The emergency contact sheet had Ryan’s name written first, because of course it did.

Before he left, he crossed the room and kissed my forehead.

“Phone stays on,” he told me.

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