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Just less common.
The air smelled like rain hitting hot pavement.
She held the appointment sheet in her lap.
My stomach tightened.
“Neither do I.”
“I mean that.”
“The old marriage was lonely.”
“If there is ever anything again, it cannot be built on silence.”
I nodded.
She gave me a cautious look.
“You say that like promises are easy now.”
For a while, she watched the first drops of rain speckle the windshield.
The gesture was so familiar that I had to look away.
Not because it hurt.
Because it felt like being trusted with something small, and small things had always been where Emily kept her love.
Two months after my divorce, I found my ex-wife sitting by herself in a hospital corridor.
I thought seeing her would break me because I was seeing what illness had done.
I was wrong.
It broke me because I finally saw what my absence had done.
An entire marriage had taught her to grow quiet so I would not have to feel uncomfortable.
I could not undo that in one hallway.
I could not undo it with one ride home.
But I could stop leaving.
That was where the real story began.
Not with a dramatic apology.
Not with torn-up paperwork or promises shouted beneath the rain.
It began with a hospital folder on a kitchen table, a cup of tea cooling between us, and Emily looking at me with exhausted eyes while I finally understood that love is not proven by how deeply you regret walking away.
It is proven by what you do when you are given one more chance to stay.
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