The water was the first thing that sounded wrong.
Not laughter. Not splashing. Just that steady slap against the pool tile, sharp and wet, while the late sun burned against the glass doors and made every fingerprint on them glow. The backyard smelled like chlorine, hot stone, and the basil I had planted by the grill because Caleb once said it made the patio feel “like home.”
Home.
That word has a way of insulting you when the wrong person is standing in it.
I had come back from the office at 4:56 p.m. with a paper grocery bag cutting a red groove into my fingers. I remember the avocado rolling loose when I set the bag down. I remember the dog behind the fence barking twice, then going silent like even he knew something had happened.
Caleb saw me first.
His hands left Vanessa’s waist so fast the water jumped around them.
“Marissa,” he said, like my name was a spill he could wipe up before it stained.
Vanessa sank lower until only her shoulders and red mouth stayed above the water. That same red lipstick had been on the rim of the coffee cup she left in my kitchen last week when she came over to “borrow sugar” for the third Tuesday in a row.
That was the trust signal, wasn’t it?
Not the sugar. Not the small talk. The fact that I had opened my side gate, my kitchen, my stupid easy smile, and let her stand close enough to learn the rhythm of my life.
Caleb cleared his throat. “Don’t make a scene.”
I looked at the patio chair.
Her black bikini top was draped over it like a confession. Caleb’s linen pants were folded beside it. His belt curled on the stone. His keys. Her sundress. Her sandals. Her phone, faceup, glowing with three missed calls from her husband.
Evidence has a sound when you finally notice it.
It clicks.