Part 2/2
After she fell asleep, I went downstairs to the kitchen. I set the table for two. I placed the chipped ceramic salt shaker in the exact center.
At 10 PM, the front door clicked open. Mark walked in. He looked tired, carrying his gray metal toolbox. He set it down by the door with a heavy sigh.
As he walked past me, I caught the scent. It wasn’t pipe grease. It was her expensive lavender body wash.
“How was the sink?” I asked, my voice terrifyingly calm.
“The same,” he said, rubbing his neck. “The trap is rusting out. I’ll have to go back next week to finish it.”
I didn’t answer. I just unlocked my phone, opened the gallery, and slid the device across the wooden table. It slid right next to the salt shaker.
Mark looked down. His eyes widened. The color drained from his face so fast he looked green. He opened his mouth, but no sound came out.
“Sarah, I can explain,” he stammered, his hands shaking as he touched the screen.
“There’s nothing to explain, Mark,” I said. “I saw you. I was standing in the yard.”
He looked up, his eyes wide with panic. And that is when he dropped his pathetic defense.
“Karen came to me first,” he whispered. “Three years ago. She found out something about you. She said if I didn’t do what she wanted, she’d destroy your life.”
I stared at him, my brow furrowing. “What are you talking about?”
“She found the old medical files,” Mark said, his voice desperate. He was leaning forward, trying to grab my hand, but I pulled away. “From Toledo General. From when we first got married. The ones about your stay in the psychiatric ward after Lilly was born. She said she’d send them to the school board. You’d lose your job at the school, Sarah. And she said she’d tell Lilly you were a monster.”
I looked at him, and for a second, I couldn’t breathe. Not because of the secret. But because of his absolute stupidity.
When Lilly was born, I suffered from severe postpartum depression. It was the darkest period of my life. I had spent two weeks in a specialized clinic to get help. I had never hidden this. It was a medical crisis, not a crime.
“Mark,” I said quietly, my voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. “The school district did a full medical background check on me when I was hired ten years ago. They have my complete file. They don’t care about a postpartum depression stay from nine years ago. It’s legally protected health information.”
He blinked, confused.
“And as for Lilly,” I continued, “I sat down with her last summer. I told her that after she was born, Mommy’s brain got sick, and some nice doctors helped me get better. She gave me a hug and asked if she could have a cookie. She already knows.”
Mark’s jaw went completely slack. He sat there, staring at me, the realization finally hitting him. The weapon Karen had been using to “blackmail” him was completely useless.
But I wasn’t done. I had spent the entire evening before he came home looking through our finances online.
“And what about the money, Mark?” I asked, leaning forward.
He flinched. “What money?”
“The four hundred dollars a month you’ve been transferring from our joint savings account to Karen’s personal account for the last three years,” I said. “Was that blackmail too? Or were you just paying her rent while she spent her divorce settlement on lavender perfume and new shoes?”
He had no answer. He just looked down at his lap, his shoulders slumped in defeat. He had spent three years playing the role of a tragic hero protecting his wife, when in reality, he was just a coward who wanted an excuse to betray me.
I stood up from the table. My hand brushed against the chipped salt shaker. I picked it up, looked at the tiny crack, and then dropped it into the trash can next to the sink. It made a sharp, clinking sound as it hit the plastic liner.
“Pack your things, Mark,” I said. “You have twenty minutes. If you’re not out by then, I’m calling the police.”
“Sarah, please,” he begged, tears finally welling in his eyes. “This is my house too.”
“No, it isn’t,” I said calmly. “My parents left this house to me in their will. It’s solely in my name. Your name isn’t on the deed. My lawyer, Martin, already confirmed that tonight.”
He looked at me, and he finally realized he had no leverage left. He walked down the hall and started packing his clothes into a duffel bag.
I stood in the kitchen, waiting. The silence in the house was heavy, but it didn’t feel lonely anymore. It felt clean.
After Mark left with his bags, I didn’t cry. I sat at the empty table and called my mother.
My mother is a traditional Midwestern woman. She doesn’t like drama. But she loves her children. When I told her what I had found, and what Karen had done, she didn’t scream. She was quiet for a long moment.
“The family dinner is this Sunday,” my mother said softly. “At the Golden Grille. You bring Lilly. I’ll handle the rest.”
On Sunday afternoon, the family gathered at the Golden Grille, a local family diner we had been going to for thirty years. My aunts, my uncles, and my cousins were all there, sitting around a long, vinyl-booth table.
Karen was already there when I arrived. She was wearing a new silk blouse and had her hair done. She looked beautiful, and she smiled at me as I walked in. It was a smug, victorious smile. She thought Mark was still her secret keeper.
She didn’t know Mark was currently sleeping on a cot in his coworker’s basement.
My mother waited until everyone had ordered their food. The waitress cleared the appetizer plates, leaving a quiet lull in the conversation.
My mother stood up. She took a manila envelope out of her purse and placed it on the table right in front of Karen.
“What’s this, Mom?” Karen asked, her smile faltering slightly.
“Open it,” my mother said. Her voice was steady, the voice of a matriarch who had raised four children on a farm and didn’t tolerate rot.
Karen opened the envelope. Inside were the 6 photos I had taken through her kitchen window, along with three years of bank statements showing the monthly transfers from my savings account.
Karen’s face went completely white. She looked at the photos, then at me, then at our mother.
“Mom, this is a misunderstanding,” Karen stammered, her voice rising in panic. “Mark was just helping me. I was lonely, and I didn’t have anyone…”
“You took your sister’s husband,” my mother said, her voice carrying across the quiet dining room. Several people at nearby tables turned to look. “And you took her money. You used her past struggles to blackmail a weak man.”
My Aunt Linda gasped, reaching for the photos. Within two minutes, the envelope was passed down the table. My uncles shook their heads. My cousins looked at Karen with disgust.
“You are no longer welcome in my home, Karen,” my mother said. “And you are no longer welcome at this table. Get up.”
Karen looked around the table, searching for an ally. But she found nothing but cold, hard stares. She stood up, her expensive heels clicking loudly on the linoleum floor, and ran out of the restaurant, leaving her purse behind.
My uncle Jerry picked up her purse and handed it to the waitress. “She won’t be needing dessert,” he said flatly.
We finished our dinner. We talked about Lilly’s school, my aunt’s garden, and the upcoming county fair. We didn’t mention Karen again.
That was six months ago.
Mark’s lawyer tried to fight for a portion of my retirement savings during the divorce proceedings, but once my lawyer presented the bank statements showing the unauthorized transfers to Karen, they settled quickly. Mark walked away with his Buick, his toolbox, and nothing else.
I bought a new salt and pepper shaker set last week. They are bright yellow, shaped like little lemons. They don’t have any chips or cracks.
Yesterday, Lilly and I were in the kitchen making cookies. She was covered in flour, laughing as she tried to lick the spoon.
I looked at the lemon salt shaker sitting on the clean counter. The sun was coming through the window, warming the room.
I don’t know what the future holds, but for the first time in three years, the water in my house runs perfectly clear.
END!