It began as an ordinary evening โ quiet, predictable, comfortably dull in that long-married kind of way.
The TV murmured in the corner, replaying some sitcom theyโd both seen a dozen times. The smell of roasted chicken lingered in the air. The kitchen clock ticked in steady rhythm, counting out another unremarkable day.Tom stirred his coffee out of habit โ black, no sugar โ a ritual more about rhythm than need. Across the table, his wife was scrolling through her tablet, half-smiling at something on the screen. She looked relaxed, content.
And thatโs when he decided to make a joke.
A small one. Harmless. The kind of throwaway remark thatโs meant to tease, not sting.
He leaned back, watching her over the rim of his mug, and said casually, โYou know, the guys at the club were saying the mailmanโs slept with every woman on our streetโฆโ
He paused, savoring the setup.
โโฆexcept one.โ
He expected the usual โ an eye roll, maybe a sarcastic quip about how men gossip more than women. But she didnโt roll her eyes. She didnโt laugh. She didnโt even look up.

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