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At my husband’s 40th birthday party, my 4-year-old pointed at my best friend and said, “Dad’s there.” I thought he was being silly — until I followed his finger and saw something on her body. My son had just exposed something I was never supposed to find.
And in the middle of all of it was Brad.
Forty looked unfairly good on him.
I was standing near the patio door with a stack of napkins in one hand and my phone in the other, but even after years of marriage, I sometimes still caught myself just looking at him, thinking how lucky I was.
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I was so naive.
Someone asked whether the veggie tray dip contained dairy. One of the kids began crying over a toy truck.
I sometimes still caught myself just looking at him.
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“I wasn’t!” he yelled back, which usually meant he either had or was just about to.
I looked at Brad again. He was smiling at something Ellie had said.
Then someone said my name again.
“Hey, where should I put the drinks?”
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I turned. “On the side table. No, the other one. Thank you.”
At one point, Ellie slipped in beside me. “You’re doing too much,” she said softly.
I let out a laugh. “I always do. You know that.”
“I could’ve helped more before people got here.”
“You already did a lot.”
“You’re doing too much.”
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