LOGINRICHARD
By the time I drove back into Seattle, the city had gone quiet.
The roads were thinner now, the rush of the day replaced by long stretches of empty lanes and tired traffic lights blinking red and yellow into the dark. My hands felt heavy on the steering wheel as I drove all the way back home. The dashboard clock glowed 10:53 p.m., and all I wanted was a shower, silence, and sleep.
Instead, the moment I turned into the compound, I knew peace was not waiting for me.
The house lights were all on.
Every single one.
The living room windows glowed bright against the night like an accusation. I let out a slow breath and parked in my usual spot. For a second, I remained seated in the car, staring at the front door.
Lena was awake.
And if she was awake at this hour with all the lights blazing, she was angry.
I rubbed my face with both hands. I should have called. I knew that. Even a simple text would have done something. But after leaving Karen’s place, after seeing that little girl, after standing there frozen like a stranger outside a fence. I had not known what to say to anyone.
Especially Lena.
I stepped out of the car and shut the door quietly, though there was no point. She probably already knew I was home.
The cold night air hit my face as I walked to the entrance. I unlocked the door and barely stepped inside before her voice struck me.
“Where have you been?”
Lena stood in the middle of the living room wearing silk pajamas and fury. Her arms were folded tight across her chest, her hair tied back, her eyes sharp enough to cut glass.
I closed the door behind me and dropped my keys onto the side table.
“Lena—”
“No.” She raised a hand. “You do not get to say my name like everything is fine. Where were you?”
I swallowed my irritation and tried to keep my tone calm.
“I’m sorry. I had something to attend to.”
Her laugh was short and humorless.
“Something to attend to?” she repeated. “That is what you have for me after disappearing all day?”
“I said I’m sorry.”
“That is not an answer.”
I walked past her toward the kitchen, needing water, needing distance, needing anything that would stop this conversation from happening right now. She followed me in quick steps.
“Tell me the truth, Richard.”
“Lena, I just got home.”
“And I’ve been here all day waiting!”
I turned and looked at her. Her face was flushed now, eyes bright with anger and something else beneath it. Fear, maybe. Hurt.
But I was too drained to comfort anyone.
“I said I’m sorry,” I replied, more firmly this time. “I’m exhausted, Lena. I am not ready for this interrogation. I want to rest.”
Her jaw dropped.
“Interrogation?”
“Yes.” I brushed past her and headed toward the stairs. “We can do this tomorrow.”
I had barely placed one foot on the first step when a sharp crash exploded behind me.
Glass shattered across the floor.
I spun around instantly.
The flower vase from the center table lay in pieces, white roses scattered among broken glass and water. Lena stood beside it, chest rising and falling, her hands trembling.
For a second, I just stared.
I had never seen her like this.
“You dare walk away from me?” she shouted. “You dare?”
“Lena.”
“No!” she snapped, pointing at me. “You do not get to dismiss me like I’m nothing. Not right now.”
I looked at the mess on the floor, then back at her.
“You threw a vase.”
“And I’ll throw ten more if that’s what it takes to make you answer me.”
I felt something cold settle in my chest.
This wasn’t just anger anymore.
Slowly, she straightened her shoulders. When she spoke again, her voice had changed. It was quieter now, colder.
“Did you go to see her?”
I frowned. “What?”
“The woman from the Federal Innovation Initiative.” Her eyes narrowed. “Did you go to meet her?”
For a moment, my face betrayed me before I could stop it.
Karen.
Lena saw it instantly.
But I quickly hardened my expression and gritted my teeth.
“Stop making wild assumptions.”
She stared at me for one second, then laughed again. This time it was softer, more dangerous.
“Wild assumptions?”
She reached for her phone on the couch, unlocked it, and strode toward me. Then she shoved the screen inches from my face.
“Is this a wild assumption, Mr Palmer?”
I looked down.
And froze.
It was a photo of me, standing outside Karen’s house by the fence.
My face turned slightly toward the yard where Karen had been with her daughter. My daughter.
The picture had been taken from across the street, probably from a passing car or by some neighbor who recognized me. Someone had probably posted it online.
My stomach tightened.
Of course.
Nothing stayed private anymore.
I slowly lifted my eyes to Lena.
She was watching me with triumph and pain mixed together.
“So?” she said. “Still an assumption?”
I said nothing.
Because what could I say? That I hadn’t planned to go there? That I only wanted to see them once?
That I had stood outside like a coward because I didn’t know how to knock on the door?
That the child laughing in the yard had my eyes?
My silence only made her angrier.
“You lied to me.”
I turned away from the phone.
“I’m not doing this tonight.”
I started back toward the stairs.
Behind me, her voice rose again.
“I will not tolerate your nonchalance, Richard!”
I kept walking.
“You hear me?” she shouted. “If you walk away from me right now, then consider us done!”
My hand tightened on the railing.
For the first time that night, I stopped.
The house fell silent except for Lena’s uneven breathing. I turned slowly and looked down at her.
She stood in the middle of the shattered glass like a queen on a battlefield, chin raised, daring me to choose.
Maybe months ago, that threat would have shaken me.
Maybe I would have rushed down, apologized again, explained myself, promised dinner dates and vacations and better communication.
But tonight, after seeing that child... after realizing how many years I had lost... something inside me had shifted.
I looked at Lena, really looked at her.
She was a beautiful, proud woman. But now, she suddenly seemed very far away.
She searched my face, waiting for fear, regret, surrender.
I gave her none.
Then I turned back around without another word and began climbing the stairs.
By the time I reached the top landing, all I felt was exhaustion, and the quiet certainty that I had lost something I knew I could never regain.
KARENBy the time I got home from work that evening, I was ready to take off my shoes, change into comfortable clothes, and pretend the rest of the world didn't exist for a few hours.The day itself had been productive, but productive days still had a way of leaving me tired. Between meetings, reports, and the endless stream of decisions that came with running A.A. Biotech, my brain felt pleasantly exhausted.The moment I stepped through the front door, however, I knew peace wasn't going to happen immediately.Sophie came running down the hallway at full speed."Mommy!"I barely had time to put down my bag before she launched herself into my arms.I laughed and hugged her tightly."Hello, sweetheart.""You took forever.""I was gone for one workday.""Exactly."I smiled."I missed you too."She nodded seriously."Welcome back."Before I could respond, my phone began ringing from inside my handbag.I reached in for it.Richard.The timing made me smile.We had spoken earlier that day a
RICHARDThe decision didn't arrive all at once.It didn't come after some dramatic revelation or life-changing conversation.Instead, it settled quietly into my mind over the course of several weeks, becoming harder to ignore every time I looked out the window of my apartment.Seattle had once been the city where I believed I would spend the rest of my life.In this city, I had built my career, made my fortune, lost my marriage, fought corporate war and learned what regret truly felt like.For a long time, I had convinced myself that staying was the responsible thing to do. My work was here. My history was here. My mother was here. Every familiar street reminded me of who I had been, and perhaps I believed I deserved those reminders.Lately, though, I had begun to wonder whether constantly looking backward was stopping me from moving forward.Every coffee shop carried a memory. Every office building reminded me of meetings that had once felt more important than going home. Every road
JASONI woke up because the other side of the bed was cold.At first, I thought Karen had simply gone downstairs to get a glass of water. It happened every now and then whenever she couldn't sleep, especially after a stressful day at work. Usually, she would wander into the kitchen, make herself tea, stare out the window for a few minutes, and quietly come back to bed.I reached across the mattress anyway. The sheets were cool, which meant that she had been gone longer than a few minutes.I blinked away the last traces of sleep and looked toward the bathroom.The light was off.The bedroom was almost completely dark except for the soft glow of moonlight slipping through the curtains. The digital clock beside the bed read 2:17 a.m., and the entire house was wrapped in the kind of silence that only existed in the middle of the night.I quietly climbed out of bed, placing my feet gingerly on the floor to avoid making much noise.As I stepped into the hallway, I immediately saw her.Karen
KARENThere are moments in life that you imagine so many times that, when they finally happen, they don't feel real at first.For weeks, I had imagined someone calling me and saying the words I wanted to hear.I had imagined celebration, relief, vindication. I had imagined myself crying, laughing, maybe even screaming.Instead, I was sitting in my office at A.A. Biotech on a quiet Wednesday morning, reviewing reports while sipping coffee that had long since gone cold, when my phone rang.The caller ID displayed a familiar name.Agent Carla Webb.I stared at it for a second before answering."Good morning, Agent Webb.""Morning, Karen."Her voice sounded lighter than usual. Almost cheerful.That immediately caught my attention."Should I be worried?"She laughed softly."For once? No,” she replied. “You should probably sit down, though."I leaned back in my chair."That sounds promising.""It is."There was a small pause. Then she said the words I had spent years waiting to hear."Vict
KARENIf someone had told me a year ago that I would willingly spend an entire Saturday wedding dress shopping with Janet and Diane Mitchell, I probably would have laughed in their face.Not because I disliked either of them.I genuinely loved them.Janet had become one of my closest friends over the years, and Diane had somehow adopted me as her own daughter since Jason and I officially became engaged. She worried about whether I was eating enough, sent me recipes I never used, and called at least twice a week simply to ask if I was getting enough sleep.The problem was that both women possessed opinions—very strong and detailed opinions—and apparently, wedding dresses brought those opinions out in full force.Within fifteen minutes of arriving at the bridal boutique, I already regretted underestimating them."Oh, absolutely not."Diane crossed her arms."That neckline is terrible."Janet looked offended."It's sophisticated.""It's boring.""It's timeless.""It looks like a curtain.
KARENBy the time Eleanor and I settled into our seats at a quiet restaurant overlooking the waterfront, I already felt lighter than I had when I landed in Seattle earlier that morning.Seattle was strange that way.For years, this city had existed inside my mind as a place that carried too many painful memories. It was where my marriage had slowly unraveled, where I had spent countless nights wondering if I had somehow failed, where disappointment and resentment had piled up until I could barely recognize myself anymore.Yet sitting there now, watching ferries move across the grey water while soft music drifted through the restaurant, I realized the city itself had never hurt me.People had. Circumstances had. Bad decisions had. But Seattle had simply been there while my life fell apart.And now, it was there while my life had finally begun to feel whole again.Eleanor folded her hands together on top of the table and looked at me quietly for a moment."I want to say something before
KARENI did not sleep well, and I had known from the moment I lay down that I was not going to.The second I turned off the bedside lamp and settled into the sheets, my mind had already started moving in circles, cold and sharp and relentless. Sleep never stood a chance against that kind of thinkin
KARENBath time with Sophie was something I always looked forward to, especially on the days before the storm which had hit my company.On this particular evening, Sophie had decided with complete certainty that she would not be leaving the bathtub.Not now.Possibly not ever.She sat in the middle
LENA.I knew Richard had called Karen.Not because he had told me. Richard never confessed to things directly when he could avoid it. He preferred silence because silence forced other people to fill the gaps themselves, and most of the time those gaps became worse than the truth. But after years of
KARENI stood by the office window long after the call ended, staring down at the city without really seeing any of it.Cars crawled through the evening traffic below like slow streams of light, people hurried along sidewalks with their heads bent against the wind, and somewhere far off, a siren ec







