Morning Perfume
It was the smell of something I didn’t recognize that slipped through the cracked kitchen window, a faint citrus that hung in the air like a promise. I glanced at the clock—seven twenty‑two—then at the coffee maker, its quiet gurgle a metronome to the day beginning. The drip was slow, each drop a tiny plink against the ceramic mug that waited on the counter.
He stood in the bedroom doorway, his silhouette framed by the weak light spilling from the hallway. The mirror behind him caught his reflection, a man smoothing the edge of his collar as if it were a lapel on a tuxedo. He lifted a bottle of cologne, the one he kept for “special occasions,” and sprayed—once, twice, three times—until the scent was a heavy, sweet fog that seemed to cling to the walls.
He inhaled, closed his eyes, and smiled at himself. Too much cologne, I thought, as the fragrance swelled, filling the room with a perfume that wasn’t mine. Too much excitement, perhaps, for a man who claimed he was just heading to the office.
I turned back to the kitchen, the kettle hissing softly. My right hand hovered over a tiny bottle of laxative, its label a faded blue that I had bought weeks ago, the night after the text came in.
It wasn’t a spur‑of‑the‑moment thing. The text had been a single line, crisp and cold:
I’ll be waiting for you tomorrow. Don’t forget the scent I love.
Signed: Caroline.
Caroline, the new secretary at his firm, a name that sounded like it belonged on a designer perfume bottle. I had seen her in the hallway, her hair always perfectly pinned, a smile that seemed rehearsed. That night, the call had ended the second I entered the room, his voice low, “Everything’s fine, love.” “Important meetings” that somehow appeared every Friday night, and the silence that grew thicker with each unanswered question.
My breath came out slow, steady. I poured the coffee into his favorite mug, the one with the chipped rim that only I ever noticed. The aroma of roasted beans mixed with the lingering perfume, a strange combination that made my stomach knot.
He stepped into the kitchen doorway, tightening his belt with a vigor I hadn’t seen in months. “Is that coffee for me?” he asked, his voice a little too bright.
I handed him the mug, my smile practiced, calm, a mask I barely recognized. “A little surprise,” I said, watching his hands wrap around the warm ceramic.
He lifted it to his lips. One sip. Two sips. Three. He drank it all, the mug empty in a single breath. The speed shocked me; years ago, when he still looked at me with something more than routine, he would have savored it, letting the bitterness linger.
His eyes flicked up, meeting mine. “And where are you going dressed up like that?” I asked, leaning against the doorway, my voice light.
He grabbed his keys, his fingers trembling just a fraction. “To a meeting,” he replied, “an important one. Strategy… projects… partnerships… you know how it goes.”
Very impressive words, I thought, but they sounded like polished excuses. “Partnerships… with perfume?” I murmured, the irony not escaping me.
He was already moving down the hall, the front door slamming shut behind him. The house fell into a heavy silence that seemed to press against my ears.
I watched the clock. One minute. Two. Five. I sat at the kitchen table, hands folded, waiting. Ten minutes. Exactly ten minutes.
The Collapse
Then a shout cracked the quiet. “DA:MN IT!” It came from outside, ragged, desperate.
I stepped onto the porch, my expression as innocent as I could manage, the smile practiced to a perfect line. He was climbing out of his sedan, his face contorted, one hand clutching his stomach as if he were trying to outrun a wave.
He rushed toward the house, his voice hoarse. “What did you put in that coffee? I’m not going to make it!”
I placed a hand dramatically against my chest, feigning shock. “Honey… you’re not nervous about seeing someone, are you?” I asked, the words slipping out with a strange, sweet cadence.
He froze, confusion flickering across his features. “What?”