During my lunch break, I rushed home to cook for my sick wife.
As soon as I walked in, I was stunned, and my face went pale at what I saw in the bathroom.
Until that afternoon, I would have said my marriage was the safest part of my life.
Not perfect.
Not free of stress.
But safe.
Steady.
Certain.
My wife, Anushka, and I had been married for three years and four months.
We lived in a modest apartment in Bangalore, on the second floor of a building where walls were too thin, water pressure was unpredictable, and everybody knew when somebody had ordered biryani.

It was not the glamorous life people post online.
It was real.
And because it was real, I loved it.
Anushka had a way of making small things feel warm.
She folded my shirts with absurd care.
She remembered how much sugar I liked in tea.
She placed basil near the kitchen window and somehow kept it alive even through the hottest weeks.

When I came home tired, she didn't ask dramatic questions.
She just looked at my face and knew.
That kind of understanding becomes a home of its own.
I trusted her completely.
At least, that is what I believed.
The morning it happened began like any other weekday.
I woke up first.

I checked my email while brushing my teeth.
I ironed my shirt badly.
Anushka laughed at my attempt and fixed the collar for me.
She looked fine then.
Maybe a little tired.
Maybe quieter than usual.
But nothing alarming.
Around ten-thirty, when I was already at the office drowning in a presentation deck, my phone vibrated.
It was a message from her.