I trusted my husband completely, especially when he told me he was spending every Saturday caring for his sick uncle. But one casual phone call changed everything I thought I knew about the man I loved.
Three months ago, my husband, Darren, told me his uncle had suffered a minor stroke.
“Uncle Michael tried to downplay it,” Darren said that night as he loosened his tie in our bedroom. “But he lives alone, Claire.
He shouldn’t be by himself right now.”
I sat on the edge of the bed. “How bad is it?”
“Not terrible. But the doctor ordered strict bed rest.
No driving or stress. He needs help.”
Michael lived two hours away from us. Darren’s family members had moved from our state years ago, so there was no one nearby to step in.
“I’ll drive there every Saturday,” Darren continued.
“I’ll clean up, buy groceries, cook, and make sure he’s taking his meds.”
I nodded. It sounded reasonable.
After 25 years of marriage, I trusted my husband.
He’d always been steady and responsible, the kind of man who set reminders on his phone for oil changes and dentist appointments.
So every Saturday at exactly 9 a.m., Darren grabbed his keys and left.
At first, I admired him for it.
“That’s really kind of you,” I told him one morning as he poured coffee into his travel mug.
“He’s family,” he said with a shrug. “You’d do the same.”
During the second week, I offered to come along.
“I could help cook,” I said.
“Or keep you company on the drive.”
He smiled and kissed my forehead.
I laughed but didn’t insist.
Weeks passed. Then three months.
Every Saturday, the same time and routine.
“He’s improving,” Darren told me one evening.
“The doctor says he’s ahead of schedule.”
That reassured me.
Besides, Michael and I were never very close.
Either way, he was still my husband’s uncle, and I wanted to do something nice for him.
So, one Friday afternoon, I decided to bake blueberry muffins for Michael.
If Darren was driving all that way weekly, the least I could do was send something homemade.
While the muffins cooled on the counter, I called Michael to check on him.
“Claire!” he said warmly after the third ring. “How are you doing?”
“I’m good.
How have you been?”
He said he was feeling much better and had even started cooking for himself again.
“What? You still need to rest, Michael. Don’t worry, though, Darren’s coming tomorrow as usual and will take care of everything.
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