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Chapter 7 Sunday

He came back on Thursday with his answer.

Helena was in the kitchen making tea, not dinner. She had stopped making dinner three days ago. She had not announced this. She had just stopped.

He stood in the doorway and looked at her and she looked back and neither of them said anything for a moment because they both already knew.

"I think we should end the marriage," he said.

"Okay," she said.

That was all. She did not ask him to explain. She did not cry. She picked up her tea and told him she would be out by Sunday and went upstairs and sat on the edge of their bed and listened to his footsteps going to the guest room and then she let herself cry. Quietly. Quickly. Just enough to get it out.

Then she called Cassidy.

"He said it," Helena said when Cassidy picked up.

One second of silence. Then, "I'm already in the car."

Cassidy arrived in fourteen minutes with nothing. No food. No wine. She just sat on the bed next to Helena and held her hand and said nothing for a long time. Which was exactly right.

"I'm out by Sunday," Helena said eventually.

"You can stay with me."

"I found a place. I've had it on hold for four days." She looked at her hands. "I knew, Cass. I knew when I walked back up those stairs after the confrontation that this was where it was going. I just needed him to say it."

"Are you okay?"

"No," Helena said. "But I'm going to be."

Cassidy squeezed her hand and said nothing else. Which was the kindest thing anyone had ever done for her.

Sunday came.

Helena started packing at six in the morning before her brain could fully wake up and make it harder. Clothes first. The ones she had bought herself. Not the blue dress he had said he liked, not the cream blouse she had chosen because it seemed like something a wife wore. Her things. The ones that existed before him.

She was zipping the second bag when the guest room door opened.

Footsteps in the hall. A pause outside the bedroom door.

"Helena."

"Almost done," she said. "Give me ten minutes."

"I'm not rushing you."

She turned around.

Damian was standing in the doorway in yesterday's clothes. He had not slept. She could see it in his face and she did not let herself feel anything about that. He looked at her two bags and her one box and the stripped side of the wardrobe that used to be hers and something crossed his face that was close enough to guilt that she had to look away.

"I can carry those down," he said.

"I'm okay."

"Helena. Let me do something."

She looked at him. At the man who had built two years of a life with her and somewhere in the middle of it stopped seeing what that life actually was. "You can carry the box," she said. "That is all."

He picked it up without a word.

She followed him downstairs with her bags and set them by the front door. Then she went back to the kitchen. She had left one thing on purpose and now she had to go in and get it.

She stood in the kitchen doorway.

The stove where she had made two years of dinners. The counter where she had left his coffee every morning before he was even awake. The chair by the door where he always put his jacket. All of it exactly as she had kept it.

She opened the spice rack.

The rosemary was on the second shelf. She had bought three jars because she used it so often. She took one and left two. She stood there for a moment looking at the two she was leaving. He would not use them. He would not notice them until they expired and then he would throw them away without once thinking about the woman who had put them there.

She closed the spice rack.

Damian was standing in the kitchen doorway behind her. She had not heard him come back in. He was looking at the jar in her hand and then at the two on the shelf and she watched the exact moment he understood what he was seeing.

His face did something she had never seen it do before.

"The rosemary," he said. Quietly. Like the word cost him something.

"I bought it," she said. "It's mine."

She walked past him. Picked up her bags and her keys.

"Helena." His voice was very low. "I am sorry. I know it is not enough. I know it does not fix anything. But I need you to know that."

She looked at him one last time. At the face she had looked up for every day for two years.

"I know you are," she said. And she meant it. But sorry was not two years of seeing her. Sorry was not coffee made before she woke up. Sorry was not knowing the rosemary without having to watch her pack it.

Sorry was just what was left when everything else was already gone.

"Take care of yourself," she said.

And walked out.

She sat in the car outside for a long time without starting it. Not crying. Just looking at the window boxes she had planted in April because she liked the way they looked when she came home.

Then she drove to the neutral apartment without looking in the rearview mirror once.

She set her good knife on the counter. She put the Christmas photo on the windowsill. She let herself fall apart for exactly one hour. Then she washed her face and opened her notes app.

Find a real job. Call Mom. Figure out health insurance. Buy coffee for this apartment. Figure out what Helena actually wants. Not what she gives. Not what she maintains. What she actually wants.

She lay in the dark and felt something small and quiet start to move in her chest. Not happiness. Not yet. Something more like the moment right before a decision.

She was almost asleep when her phone lit up.

Damian was calling.

She watched his name glow in the dark. She thought about two years of rosemary chicken and looking up every time his key hit the door and making his coffee before her own without him ever once noticing enough to mention it. She thought about the pause before I'm happy. She thought about his face when he saw those two jars left behind on the spice rack.

She pressed the red button.

Put the phone face down.

Lay in the dark and closed her eyes.

Tomorrow she would go and sign the papers. Tomorrow it would be official. Tomorrow she would walk out of that lawyer's office a free woman and figure out what that meant.

But tonight she just needed to sleep.

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