“There’s something you don’t know about your husband.”
“Why?” I asked.
He glanced past me, like he could see into our whole life, then met my eyes again.
“There’s something you don’t know about your husband,” he said. “You need to read the letter in this envelope.”
He held out a thick envelope.
Behind me, I heard the soft sound of wheels.
“I’m here because of a man named Harold Peters.”
“Claire?” Noah mumbled.
He rolled up beside me, hair a disaster, t-shirt wrinkled, wedding ring still shiny and new.
Thomas’s face softened when he saw him.
“Hello, Noah,” he said. “You probably don’t remember me. But I’m here because of a man named Harold Peters.”
“I don’t know any Harold.”
Noah frowned.
So we let Thomas in.
Thomas nodded toward the envelope.
“He knew you. May I come in? It will be easier to explain if you read the letter.
Everything in me said Don’t trust this, but I felt Noah’s hand brush my elbow.
“Door stays open,” he murmured.
So we let Thomas in.