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Betrayal at Birthday Party Novel Cover

Betrayal at Birthday Party

I balanced the grocery bags in my arms, fumbling for the keys to our suburban home. The late afternoon sun cast long shadows across our neatly trimmed lawn as I finally managed to unlock the door, shouldering it open with a practiced nudge. "Stefan?" I called out, expecting my husband's usual greeting. Only silence answered me. I made my way to the kitchen, the weight of the bags digging into my forearms. As I rounded the corner, I froze. There, lined up along our granite countertop, was a row of bright yellow rubber ducks. Not one or two, but at least a dozen, their plastic beaks all pointing in the same direction like some bizarre military formation. I set the groceries down slowly, blinking to make sure I wasn't hallucinating. The ducks remained, their cheerful yellow bodies incongruous against our sleek, modern kitchen.
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Chapter 1

I balanced the grocery bags in my arms, fumbling for the keys to our suburban home. The late afternoon sun cast long shadows across our neatly trimmed lawn as I finally managed to unlock the door, shouldering it open with a practiced nudge.

"Stefan?" I called out, expecting my husband's usual greeting. Only silence answered me.

I made my way to the kitchen, the weight of the bags digging into my forearms. As I rounded the corner, I froze. There, lined up along our granite countertop, was a row of bright yellow rubber ducks. Not one or two, but at least a dozen, their plastic beaks all pointing in the same direction like some bizarre military formation.

I set the groceries down slowly, blinking to make sure I wasn't hallucinating. The ducks remained, their cheerful yellow bodies incongruous against our sleek, modern kitchen.

"Stefan?" I called again, my voice echoing through our two-story home.

Curiosity pulled me toward the stairs. In our master bathroom, more ducks perched along the edge of the tub and on the sink counter. Small ones, large ones, some wearing little sailor hats or sunglasses. I touched one gingerly, as if it might suddenly spring to life.

The sound of the garage door opening sent me hurrying back downstairs. Stefan walked in, his tall frame filling the doorway, his dark hair slightly disheveled as always after work.

"Hey," he said casually, as if nothing was unusual. "How was your day?"

I gestured around us. "What's with all the rubber ducks?"

Something flickered across his face—so quick I almost missed it. Discomfort? Guilt? But then he smiled, the charming smile that had first drawn me to him seven years ago.

"Just decorations," he said, brushing past me to grab a bottle of water from the fridge. "Thought they were fun."

"Fun," I repeated, watching him carefully. "You didn't think to mention you were going to fill our house with bath toys?"

He shrugged, not quite meeting my eyes. "Didn't think it was a big deal."

I wanted to press further, but something in his posture—the slight tension in his shoulders, the way he kept his back to me—made me hesitate. After seven years of marriage, I knew when Stefan was closing himself off.

"There's even one stuck to the windshield of my car," I said instead, keeping my tone light.

"Oh, that." He laughed, but it sounded hollow. "Just a joke."

A joke that wasn't funny and made no sense. I turned away to unpack the groceries, unsettled by the non-explanation and the strange new additions to our home.

---

Three nights later, I woke to an empty space beside me. The digital clock on my nightstand read 2:17 AM. I reached out to touch Stefan's side of the bed—cold.

Slipping out from under the covers, I padded silently down the hallway. A thin line of light shone from beneath the kitchen door. I pushed it open slowly.

Stefan stood at the sink, his back to me, shoulders hunched as he worked intently at something. The soft sound of water running and the occasional squeak of rubber filled the silence. I watched, bewildered, as my husband methodically washed rubber duck after rubber duck, lining them up on a dish towel to dry.

"Stefan?"

He startled violently, spinning around. Water splashed across the front of his t-shirt as his hands jerked, sending a duck flying. His eyes were wide, almost panicked.

"Cheyenne! I—" He quickly moved to block my view of the sink, but not before I saw at least a dozen more ducks waiting to be cleaned. "I couldn't sleep."

"So you're... washing rubber ducks at two in the morning?"

He laughed nervously, reaching behind him to shut off the water. "They were dusty. From the store."

"All of them? Tonight?"

"Just... wanted to clean them." He grabbed a towel, drying his hands with unnecessary focus. "Go back to bed. I'll be up soon."

I stood there, unable to reconcile this strange behavior with the man I thought I knew. Something was wrong—deeply wrong—but I couldn't put my finger on what.

"Stefan, what's going on?"

"Nothing's going on," he said too quickly. "They're just decorations, Cheyenne. Just ducks."

But they weren't just ducks. They were secrets, somehow. I could feel it.

---

The floral scent caught me by surprise as I hugged Stefan goodbye the next morning. It wasn't his usual cologne—something softer, more feminine, clinging faintly to the collar of his shirt. I pulled back slightly, my nose wrinkling in confusion.

"New cologne?" I asked, trying to keep my tone casual.

He stepped back quickly. "What? No. Same as always."

I watched him gather his things, noticing how he avoided my gaze, how he checked his phone three times in the span of two minutes. When had he changed his phone password? I'd reached for it yesterday to check the weather while mine was charging, only to find I no longer knew the code.

"We still on for dinner tonight?" I asked. "That new place on Elm?"

He nodded absently. "Sure, sure."

"At seven, right?"

"Seven works," he agreed, already halfway out the door.

But I knew he wouldn't remember. Just like he hadn't remembered our conversation about weekend plans yesterday, or the movie we'd watched together the night before that he'd sworn he'd never seen.

As his car pulled away, I stood in our doorway, the scent of unfamiliar flowers still lingering in my nose, wondering when my husband had become a stranger—and what secrets those yellow ducks were keeping for him.

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