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"Travel mercies, my love. Come back safe to us." Adaeze pressed send and placed her phone face down on the kitchen counter. The house was quiet now — the kind of quiet that only exists after children have finally surrendered to sleep. She could hear the hum of the refrigerator, the distant sound of a neighbour's television, and the steady rhythm of her own breathing. She stood there for a moment, hands resting on the counter, eyes staring at nothing in particular. The kitchen was clean. She had made sure of it before the children went to bed — wiped down the counters, washed the last of the dishes, put everything back in its place. Order was something she had always needed. In a life that felt increasingly beyond her control, a clean kitchen was at least something she could manage. Emeka was on his way to London again. Third trip this year. She had ironed his shirts herself, folded them with the kind of care that had become muscle memory over twelve years of marriage. She had packed his toiletries, reminded him about his blood pressure medication, double checked that his international documents were all in order, confirmed his hotel booking when he forgot to. She had done all of this without being asked. That was the thing about being a good wife — nobody asked. You just did. You anticipated, you prepared, you showed up. You smoothed the path so thoroughly that the person walking on it never had to think about the stones you moved out of the way. And you told yourself that was love. Is it still love if it only flows in one direction? She pushed the thought away and reached for the kettle. Tea. She would make tea, check on the children one more time and go to bed. Tomorrow was a full day. It was always a full day. Her phone buzzed. She turned it over expecting his reply. Maybe a simple "thank you baby" or "I'll call when I land." Something small. Something that cost nothing but would have meant everything. Something that said she was on his mind even as he walked through departures with his carry-on and his business phone and whatever else he carried into that other life he lived when he was away from home. Instead it was a notification from their shared family group. His mother asking if Emeka had travelled safely. Adaeze typed a reply, told her yes, he had left, all was well. All was well. She almost laughed. She carried her tea to the bedroom and sat on the edge of the bed they shared. His side was neat, undisturbed. She ran her hand across his pillow for a moment then pulled it away, almost embarrassed by the gesture. Embarrassed to be caught — even by herself — reaching for a man who was not there. Who was rarely truly there even when he was. When had she started feeling like a stranger in her own marriage? She couldn't pinpoint the exact moment. That was the cruel thing about erosion — it doesn't announce itself. It doesn't arrive with a single devastating blow that you can point to and say, there, that is when everything changed. It comes quietly, slowly, one small disappointment at a time. One ignored message. One deflected conversation. One dinner eaten in silence. One night of reaching for someone who has already turned away. One morning of waking up beside a man and feeling profoundly alone. Until one day you look up and realise that the distance between you and your husband is not measured in miles — even when he is sitting right beside you. Her phone buzzed again. This time it was him. "Landed. Tired. Will call tomorrow." She stared at the message for a long time. No "miss you already." No "thank you for always taking care of everything." No "kiss the children for me." No acknowledgment that she existed beyond her function as the woman who kept everything running while he moved freely through the world. Just — tired. You're always tired, she thought. Tired of the journey. Tired of the calls. Tired of me. She plugged her phone in, turned off the bedside lamp and lay in the darkness staring at the ceiling. She thought about the early years. The version of Emeka she had married — or perhaps more honestly, the version of their marriage she had believed in. The way he used to call her three times a day when he travelled. The way his voice would change when she picked up, softening in a way it didn't soften for anyone else. The way he would come home from trips and walk through the door and reach for her first, before he even put down his bag. He used to bring her back something small from every trip. Not because it was expensive but because he had thought of her. A scarf in a colour she mentioned once in passing. A perfume she had smelled on someone else and said she liked. A chocolate they didn't sell at home that he had remembered months later and tracked down in some airport shop. Small things. Unremarkable things. The kind of things that said — I was away but you were with me. I saw this and I thought of you. You exist in my mind even when you are not in my sight. When did the calls stop? When did the small things stop? When did she become someone he texted two sentences to after an international flight and called it enough? She couldn't remember. And that was the thing about losing someone you live with — there is no funeral. No moment of acknowledged farewell. No clear before and after. You just look up one day and realise the person standing in front of you is wearing the face of someone you used to know and speaking with their voice but something essential is gone and you cannot name the day it left. A sound came from down the hall. Adaeze was on her feet before she was fully conscious of moving, her body responding with the instinct of a mother who had trained herself to sleep with one ear always open. She moved through the darkness without turning on a light — she knew this house the way you know something you have lived in and loved and maintained alone. Every creak of the floor, every corner, every door that needed to be lifted slightly to open quietly. She pushed open the door to the children's room and found her youngest, Omachi, sitting up in bed with both arms outstretched and her face arranged in the particular expression of a child who has woken in the night and found the world frightening. "Mummy." "I'm here, my love. I'm here." Adaeze crossed the room in three steps and gathered her up — all warm weight and soft breath and the specific comfort of a small body that fits perfectly against yours because you are the person it has always reached for. Omachi's head dropped immediately onto her shoulder, her fingers curling into the fabric of Adaeze's nightgown with the fierce unconscious grip of a child who has found her anchor. "Where's Daddy?" The question was soft. Innocent. Delivered without agenda in the way that only a three year old can ask something that lands like a stone in still water. "Daddy travelled, my love. He'll be back soon." Omachi made a small sound — somewhere between acceptance and dissatisfaction — and within minutes her breathing had steadied and deepened back into sleep. But Adaeze did not put her down immediately. She stood in the dark room holding her daughter long after she needed to, swaying slightly without realising it, breathing in the smell of her hair. This was the part nobody saw. Not Emeka, who was checking into his London hotel right now. Not his mother, who had already sent two more messages to the family group asking for updates. Not the friends from church who smiled at them warmly on Sundays and called them a beautiful couple and meant it sincerely because from the outside that was exactly what they appeared to be. Nobody saw the woman standing alone in the dark at midnight, holding a child who reached for a father who was not there, swaying in a silence so complete she could hear her own heartbeat. Nobody saw this. And nobody would. Because this was the other thing about being a certain kind of woman — you learnt very early that the world did not have much patience for your private grief. You learnt to carry it neatly, invisibly, without inconveniencing anyone. You learnt to say "I'm fine" with such conviction that eventually even you half believed it. She carefully laid Omachi back against her pillow, tucked the blanket around her small shoulders, smoothed her hair back from her forehead and stood watching her sleep for a moment. The easy surrender of a child's sleep. The way their faces in rest carry no weight at all. She wished, briefly and fiercely, that she could sleep like that. She walked back to her own room. Sat on the edge of the bed. Picked up her phone one more time with the particular compulsion of someone who knows there will be nothing there but checks anyway. No new messages. Of course. She set it back down and lay in the dark and let her mind go where it had been trying to go all evening — to the question she kept turning away from because it was too large and too heavy and too without a clear answer. How long could she keep doing this? Not in the dramatic sense. She was not planning anything. She was not at any kind of edge. She was simply a woman lying in her bed at midnight asking herself an honest question for perhaps the first time in a very long time. How long could she keep pouring herself into a marriage that poured nothing back? How long could she keep praying for a man who did not pray for her? How long could she keep being the one who held everything together before the holding began to cost her something she could not get back? She had been taught, as most women of her background and faith had been taught, that endurance was a virtue. That a good wife was a patient wife. That the storms of marriage were weathered not by speaking up but by praying harder, by being softer, by making yourself easier to love in the hope that one day the love you deserved would find its way back to you. She had believed that. She had practised it faithfully for twelve years. And lying here in the dark she found herself wondering, quietly and without drama, whether any of it had made a single difference. Whether Emeka was a better husband because she was a patient wife. Whether her silence had bought her peace or simply taught him that silence was what she would offer no matter what he did. Whether the woman she had been before this marriage — bold, clear eyed, certain of her own worth — would recognise the woman lying here in the dark afraid to ask for what she deserved. Outside a car passed slowly on the street. Its headlights swept briefly across the ceiling and disappeared. Adaeze watched the light come and go. Tomorrow she would wake up early. She would get the children ready, navigate the school run, come back and manage the house and check in on the family business and answer messages and make food and do the hundred invisible things that kept this life functioning. She would do all of this without complaint and without credit and without anyone asking how she was — really asking, the kind of asking that wants an honest answer. And she would be fine. She was always fine. But tonight, in the privacy of her own mind, in the room where no one could see her, she allowed herself one moment of absolute honesty. She was not happy. Not the loud, dramatic, obvious kind of unhappy. Something quieter and more insidious than that. The kind of unhappy that arrives so gradually it stops feeling like unhappiness and starts feeling like just the way things are. The kind that wraps itself so thoroughly around your daily existence that you begin to mistake it for normal life. She had been unhappy for a long time. And somewhere in London, in a hotel room she had helped him book, her husband was about to give her a very specific and undeniable reason why. She didn't know that yet. She turned onto her side, pulled the blanket around her shoulders and closed her eyes. Sleep, when it came, was thin and dreamless. Outside the city continued its indifferent life. Cars and voices and the distant sounds of a world that did not pause for private grief. And in a hotel room in London, a phone lit up with a message. A message that was not meant for a wife.
There was a morning in April that arrived differently from other mornings.Not dramatically. Not with any external signal that distinguished it from the hundred mornings that had preceded it in the year since everything had broken open and begun, slowly and imperfectly, to mend. The alarm sounded at its usual time. The light came through the curtains at its usual angle. The sounds of the neighbourhood assembling itself into another day arrived with the familiar rhythm that had been the backdrop of her mornings for years.But something was different.She lay in the bed for a moment after the alarm, which she did not usually do — she was typically up before the sound fully registered, her body having anticipated the day before her mind caught up with it. This morning she lay still. Not with the anxious stillness of a woman bracing for something or the exhausted stillness of a woman who had nothing left. Simply still. Present in her own body in the particular unhurried way that felt, she
Tobenna turned fifteen on a Saturday in March.March had always been his month in the particular way that birth months belong to people — the way they carry a quality specific to the person born in them, so that when March arrived each year Adaeze thought immediately and specifically of her eldest child. Of the particular quality of light in March mornings, which had a brightness that was not yet fully warm, an ambition that outpaced the actual temperature, something striving and not quite arrived. She had always thought this suited Tobenna exactly. Striving and not quite arrived. A person who was always reaching toward something slightly beyond the current moment without anxiety about the reaching, simply oriented toward whatever was ahead with the steady purposeful quality that had been his since infancy.Fifteen.She had been thinking about that number in the days leading up to it. About what fifteen meant for this particular boy, in this particular year, after everything this fami
He went on a Thursday.Not because Thursday held any particular significance — not the way Tuesdays had come to hold significance in Adaeze's private calendar of the past year, marked by the particular quality of things that arrived without warning on what should have been ordinary days. Thursday was simply the day that made sense logistically, the day Emeka had cleared his afternoon of site visits and meetings, the day Amaka had said worked for her when he had communicated through the channel they had established, the day that was available in the way that days become available when two people are trying to arrange something neither of them entirely knows how to arrange.Adaeze had known about it since Monday.That was deliberate — on his part and acknowledged on hers. He had told her the moment the day was settled, had sat across from her at the kitchen table on Monday evening and said Thursday afternoon, I've arranged to go and see the baby Thursday afternoon, with the particular d
Time moved differently in the final months of someone else's pregnancy when that pregnancy was the consequence of your husband's betrayal and the child inside it was going to be your children's half-sibling and there was nothing to do about any of it except keep living your life with as much honesty and grace as you could manage on any given day.Adaeze had discovered this particular quality of time in the weeks after the ultrasound. The pregnancy had become, in the architecture of their daily lives, a fact they lived alongside rather than a crisis they were constantly responding to. It sat in the background of ordinary days the way certain permanent things sit — not dominating every moment, not invisible either, simply present. A fixture of the landscape that had been strange and then less strange and then simply part of how things were.She had not expected to arrive at that acceptance as quickly as she had.Had expected the months to feel like a countdown to something she was dread
Emeka told her about it on a Monday evening.He came home at his usual time, greeted the children with the consistency that had become genuinely his rather than performed, helped Omachi with the ongoing diplomatic situation involving her soft toys that seemed to require adult mediation at least three times a week, and then found Adaeze in the bedroom where she was going through the week's schedule with the particular organised attention she brought to the beginning of every week.He sat on the edge of the bed.She looked up from her phone and read his face the way she had learnt to read it over the past months — not with the anxious scrutiny of a woman bracing for betrayal, but with the clear attention of a woman who had simply become very good at seeing her husband accurately. Something was sitting in him. Something he had been carrying since at least this morning, she estimated, possibly longer."What is it?" she said.He exhaled slowly."Amaka sent a message through the channel we
The weeks that followed the coffee shop meeting had a different quality to them.Not easier exactly — easier was not the right word for a season that still contained so much that was unresolved, so much that required daily navigation, so much that would not settle into anything resembling simple for a long time yet. But different. As though something that had been held at a particular pitch of tension for weeks had been released by a fraction, enough to allow the people inside the situation to breathe at a slightly more sustainable depth.Adaeze noticed it first in her own body.She had been carrying the anticipation of that meeting in her shoulders for weeks without fully realising it — a physical bracing that had become so habitual she had stopped registering it as something external to her ordinary state and had simply incorporated it into how she moved through her days. It was only in the days after the coffee shop, when she noticed the absence of the tightness across her upper ba







