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The hotel corridor on the ninth floor of the Grand Meridian smelled of expensive lemon cleaner and the faint, metallic undertone of secrets that expensive places always tried to hide.

Soft carpet swallowed Eleanorโ€™s footsteps as she walked toward room 912, two silver gift bags rustling in her hands. One held a cashmere scarf in her motherโ€™s favorite shade of dove gray.

The other contained a delicate silver picture frame engraved with the date of her parentsโ€™ fortieth wedding anniversary. She had spent weeks choosing the gifts, imagining the warm smile her mother would give and the proud nod from her father when they opened them tomorrow night at the family dinner downstairs.

Eleanor paused outside the door, smoothing the front of her cream silk blouse and forcing a practiced smile onto her face. At forty-two, she had perfected that smileโ€”polite, composed, the kind that said everything was fine even when her chest felt tight.

She raised her hand to knock, then hesitated, listening. From inside came the low murmur of voices. Her motherโ€™s laugh, light and familiar. Then a deeper voiceโ€”her fatherโ€™sโ€”followed by a softer, younger female laugh that didnโ€™t belong.

Eleanorโ€™s smile faltered for half a second. Probably room service, she told herself. Or one of the hotel staff helping with decorations for tomorrow. She knocked twice, bright and cheerful.

The door opened.

Her mother, Margaret, stood there in a pale blue robe, hair slightly mussed, cheeks flushed. Behind her, sitting on the edge of the king-sized bed, was a woman no older than thirty.

Sleek dark hair, sharp cheekbones, wearing one of the hotelโ€™s white robes that hung open just enough to reveal the curve of a shoulder. On the nightstand between them sat two half-empty glasses of champagne and a small velvet jewelry box.

The air left Eleanorโ€™s lungs in a silent rush.

โ€œEleanor, darling!โ€ Margaret said quickly, stepping forward to block the view. โ€œYouโ€™re early. We werenโ€™t expecting you until tomorrow.โ€

โ€œIโ€ฆ wanted to drop these off tonight so I wouldnโ€™t forget in the morning.โ€ Eleanorโ€™s voice sounded distant, as if someone else were speaking. Her eyes kept drifting past her mother to the woman on the bed, who now watched her with calm, almost curious detachment. The younger woman didnโ€™t look embarrassed. She looked comfortable.

Margaretโ€™s practiced smile mirrored Eleanorโ€™s own. โ€œThis is Vanessa. Sheโ€™sโ€ฆ helping me with some anniversary details. Come in for a moment. You can leave the gifts.โ€

Eleanor stepped inside on autopilot, the silver bags suddenly feeling leaden. The room smelled of vanilla candles and something sweeterโ€”perfume that wasnโ€™t her motherโ€™s. On the dresser lay a silk slip the color of champagne.

A pair of delicate gold hoop earrings rested beside it, identical to the ones her father had given her mother for their thirtieth anniversary.

Vanessa rose gracefully and extended a hand. โ€œItโ€™s lovely to meet you, Eleanor. Your mother speaks of you often.โ€

Eleanor shook the hand automatically. The womanโ€™s fingers were warm, manicured, confident. Up close, Eleanor could see faint traces of lipstick on Vanessaโ€™s collarbone that hadnโ€™t been wiped away completely.

Margaret closed the door softly. โ€œDarling, please donโ€™t look like that. Itโ€™s not what you think.โ€

โ€œThen what is it?โ€ Eleanorโ€™s voice cracked despite her efforts. โ€œBecause it looks exactly like what I think.โ€

Her mother sighed, the sound tired rather than guilty. โ€œYour father and Iโ€ฆ weโ€™ve had an understanding for years. He has his life. I have mine. Vanessa has been part of mine for the last eighteen months. She makes me feel alive again. Desired. Seen.โ€

Eleanor set the gift bags down on the desk with exaggerated care, as if they might explode. โ€œEighteen months. While Iโ€™ve been planning this anniversary dinner. While Dadโ€™s been playing golf and pretending everything is perfect.

While Iโ€™ve beenโ€ฆโ€ She stopped, swallowing the rest of the sentence. While Iโ€™ve been lonely in my own marriage. While Iโ€™ve been wondering why my parentsโ€™ relationship seemed so effortless when mine was falling apart.

Vanessa spoke gently. โ€œI know this is a shock. I told Margaret we should tell the family before the big celebration, but she wanted to wait until after.โ€

โ€œAfter?โ€ Eleanor laughed, a brittle sound. โ€œYou were going to let us throw you a party celebrating forty years of marriage while you were sleeping with someone else in the same hotel?โ€

Margaretโ€™s eyes hardened slightly. โ€œDonโ€™t be dramatic, Eleanor. Marriage is complicated. Your father knows. Heโ€™s had his ownโ€ฆ arrangements. We simply stopped pretending a long time ago. The anniversary is for the family, not for us.โ€

The words landed like stones in still water.

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