The Stranger at My Table
When my son brought a new friend to dinner, I never expected the stranger sitting across from me to carry the one secret I’d spent a lifetime trying to forget. My name is Megan. Fifty-five years old, a wife, a mother, a woman who has stitched her heart back together more times than she can count.
My life isn’t glamorous—I bake too many cookies, talk to my hydrangeas like they’re old friends, and still fold my husband’s socks the way his mother taught me. My son Greg is twenty-two, finishing his degree while working at a marketing firm. My husband Richard is steady, kind, and still insists that a pinch of salt in coffee “brings out the flavor.” That’s us in a nutshell.
Then everything changed. It started on a Thursday. Greg came home, dumped his bag by the stairs, and wandered into the kitchen, sniffing the air like a bloodhound.
“Smells amazing,” he said, eyeing the chicken pot pie cooling on the counter. “How was work?” I asked, peering over my reading glasses. He shrugged.
“Good. There’s this girl—well, woman—Nancy. We’ve been working on the same campaign.”
I smirked.
“A girl, huh?”
He groaned. “Mom, don’t start. We’re just friends.
She’s from Colorado, super chill. Not my type, but we get along.”
I didn’t push. But I filed it away.
Then, the following Sunday, he brought her home. I opened the door expecting a polite stranger. Instead, I found Nancy—soft brown curls pulled into a neat bun, a faint floral scent clinging to her scarf.
She smiled, holding out a bottle of wine. “Hi, I’m Nancy.”
“Megan,” I said, taking the bottle. “Come in, sweetie.
Dinner’s almost ready.”
That night, she barely spoke, but when our hands brushed passing the mashed potatoes, something inside me flickered. Not fear. Just… recognition.
Nancy kept coming back. First with cheesecake. Then a potted succulent for the kitchen.
She played Scrabble with my daughter Leah, laughed with Richard over old sitcoms. She fit in like she’d always been here. “Greg, she’s lovely,” I said one night as we washed dishes.
“She is,” he agreed. “But like I said—just friends.”
I nodded. But the way she looked at him sometimes—like she knew something the rest of us didn’t—made me wonder.
Then, the cracks started to show. My brother and his wife visited, and a casual comment from Nancy about a “private conversation” sent my sister-in-law storming out, red-faced. “I thought it was public knowledge,” Nancy whispered later, gripping her teacup.
“It wasn’t,” I said carefully. Then, the vase. My grandmother’s porcelain treasure, always kept behind glass—shattered on the floor.
“I was dusting,” Nancy said, cheeks flushed. “It slipped. I’m so sorry.”
Bad luck, I told myself.
But then my desk drawer was rifled through. The manila envelope—Greg’s birth documents, old letters, things no one knew about but me—was gone. Nancy had borrowed a pen that day.
I didn’t accuse her. I couldn’t. Then, last Sunday, she walked in late, just as I was slicing pie.
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