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“Did it?”
The answer was so obvious it almost humiliated me.
“No,” I said.
Then she lowered her eyes back to the care plan.
“I didn’t want to be someone you felt responsible for.”
“That was never what you were.”
“You stopped coming home, Michael.”
Not an accusation thrown across a kitchen.
A quiet record placed into evidence.
“You stopped asking.”
“I know.”
I looked at her then, because I owed her enough respect not to turn away.
Her eyes welled.
“Yes.”
One word.
No malice.
No drama.
Only the truth.
The nurse came back with discharge instructions and a sheet for the follow-up appointment.
Emily reached for the papers, but her hand trembled.
I took them instead.
Not because she could not manage.
Because I was there.
Because for once, I could do the simple thing in front of me instead of hiding inside the complicated thing behind it.
I read through the medication schedule.
I checked the appointment date.
I asked the nurse which number we should call if her symptoms became worse.
Emily watched me with a look I could not quite understand.
Maybe distrust.
Maybe fatigue.
Maybe the tiniest form of hope, the kind people are too afraid to name.
When it was time to go, she insisted she could walk.
She lasted five steps before I saw her sway.
I did not grab her.
I did not cause a scene.
I simply stepped beside her and offered my arm.
For a moment, she stared at it.
Then she held on.
We made our way slowly down the corridor.
Past the vending machines.
Past the reception desk with the little flag.
Past the elevator where a family stood holding balloons for someone upstairs.
Outside, the afternoon light was bright enough to make both of us squint.
My car was parked near the far edge of the lot.
The same dented sedan Emily used to joke had outlasted more than most marriages.
I opened the passenger door.
She looked at me.
“I can get a rideshare.”
“No,” I said gently. “You don’t have to.”
Her fingers tightened around the discharge folder.
“This doesn’t fix anything.”
“I know.”
“I’m not pretending April didn’t happen.”
“I’m not asking you to.”
She turned her gaze toward the hospital entrance.
People passed in and out through the sliding doors, carrying flowers, bags, coffee, fear.
“I don’t know what this is,” she said.
“Neither do I.”
It was the first honest answer I had given her in months.
She got into the car.
I drove her home.
Her apartment was small and far too tidy, the kind of tidy that comes from having no strength left to create clutter.
A stack of mail sat on the counter.
A half-empty water bottle rested beside the couch.
A blanket was folded with hospital-like precision over the armrest.
I placed the discharge papers on the kitchen table.
Then I made tea because I did not know what else to do, and tea had always been one of the things Emily made when the world felt too big.
She sat at the table and watched the steam rise.
For a long while, neither of us said anything.
Then she said, “You don’t have to stay.”
I turned off the stove.
“I know.”
“You can leave after the tea.”
“I know.”
She looked down at her hands.
“Then why are you still here?”
Because I loved you and failed you.
Because I confused your silence with permission.
Because I wanted the easy version of marriage and left when grief demanded the real one.
Because two months in a rented apartment had taught me that loneliness was not the same as freedom.
I did not say all of that.
Not then.
Some truths are too heavy to place on a sick person all at once.
So I said the only thing that could help.
“Because you have an appointment on Monday, and somebody needs to drive you.”
Emily covered her face with one hand.
Her shoulders shook once.
I stayed still, fighting every urge to rush forward and make myself feel forgiven.
Then she lowered her hand.
“Don’t do this because you feel guilty.”
“I won’t.”
“Don’t do it because you think it makes you a good man.”
“I’m not confused about that either.”
That almost brought a smile to her face.
Almost.
I pulled out the chair across from her, then paused.
“May I sit?”
She studied me for a long moment.
Then she nodded.
So I sat.
During the next several weeks, I drove her to appointments.
I learned where to park.
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