By the time Marissa turned onto Ridge Hollow Lane that afternoon, she was only thinking about avocados.
The firm had let everyone leave early because the server went down just before four, and she had stopped at the market almost on instinct.
Caleb liked guacamole on Thursdays.
That was such a small, married thought that it almost hurt her later.
She bought avocados, limes, cilantro, and the expensive tortilla chips he always complained were too salty but finished before dinner anyway.
The paper bag was too full, and one of the twisted handles cut a red groove into her fingers as she walked up the driveway.
Nothing about the house looked wrong from the front.
The sprinklers ticked over the strip of grass between the sidewalk and the mailbox.
The curtains in the upstairs bedroom were half open.
Caleb’s new $64,000 truck was in the driveway, clean enough to reflect the sky.
The truck had been another argument disguised as a celebration.
He said he deserved it after a brutal quarter at work.
Marissa said a person could deserve something and still need to count the money.
Caleb had smiled then, kissed her forehead, and told her she worried beautifully.
That was one of his tricks.
He made condescension sound like affection.
They had been married long enough for Marissa to recognize his tones, but not long enough, apparently, for her to stop excusing them.
Ridge Hollow was the kind of subdivision where people pretended privacy existed because the fences were tall.
It did not.
Everyone knew who got a new car.
Everyone knew whose dog barked too much.
Everyone knew Vanessa from number 218 came over every Tuesday to borrow sugar, even though she hosted dinner parties with desserts that looked like magazine covers.
Vanessa had been easy to like at first.
She was the kind of neighbor who remembered birthdays, complimented patio plants, and laughed at the exact volume that made a person feel included.
She had brought banana bread when Marissa had the flu.
She had watered the basil once when Marissa and Caleb went to Austin for a long weekend.
She knew the gate code because Marissa had given it to her herself.
That was the part Marissa would replay later.
At 5:42 P.M., I Found My Husband in Our $18,000 Backyard Pool With the Neighbor Who Borrowed Sugar Every Tuesday — He Whispered, “Don’t Make a Scene.” So I Picked Up Their Clothes, Pressed One Button, and Let the Entire Subdivision Hear the Truth