LOGINFor seven years, my husband told me I was the problem. He said I was too much, too soft, too broken to give him a child. I believed him, until the night of our anniversary, when I found two pink lines on a test… and found him on the study sofa with my best friend. She was pregnant too, his baby. She had been pregnant for months, I did not scream, I did not cry in front of them. I picked up my things, walked out with nothing, and never looked back. I built a new life in a city where nobody knew my name. I found a home. I found work I loved. I found a man who looked at me like I was never broken at all. Months later, my ex-husband showed up, begging me to come back now that he knew the truth: the baby was his too. He wanted me back the moment he realized what he lost. He was too late. I did not need his name. I did not need his money. I did not need him. While he lost everything he built on lies, I built a life that was finally, completely mine.
View MorePOV: Roza
"You burned it again."
That was the first thing Callum ever said to me in the kitchen. Three months into our marriage, a Sunday morning, eggs on the stove, his mother's recipe that I had written out by hand and practiced twice. He said it without looking up from his phone. He poured his coffee, picked up his briefcase, and walked back out, and I stood there with the smoke curling around me and that single sentence sitting in my chest like a stone I did not yet know I would carry for seven years.
I should have understood him then. I should have read that moment for exactly what it was. But I was twenty-three and newly married and desperately in love with a man who looked at me like a problem he had agreed to manage, and I told myself it would get better. That he would soften. That somewhere beneath the grey eyes and the expensive suits and the silences that filled our house like weather, there was a man who would one day choose me.
Seven years. That was how long it took me to stop waiting.
Tonight was our anniversary, and the house smelled of vanilla and warm sugar because I had been in the kitchen since two in the afternoon making him a cake he had not asked for and would not mention. Three tiers. Lemon cream between each layer. Icing dusted over the top the way I had seen in a magazine, careful and slow, because the kitchen was the one room in this marriage that had never made me feel like an inconvenience. I piped the last rosette of frosting and stepped back and looked at it, and for just a moment, standing in the warm amber light above the hob with flour on my wrist and the cake sitting there between us like an offering, I let myself feel something close to hope.
Seven candles. I had not yet lit them.
He had not called. He had not texted. He had come home at half past eight without warning, the way he always did, and gone straight to the study without passing through the kitchen, and I had heard the door click shut and gone back to the frosting and not said a word, because that was the language of this marriage. Silence as agreement. Absence as answer.
I wiped my hands on a kitchen towel and went upstairs.
The pregnancy test was on the edge of the bathroom sink where I had left it four hours ago. The room was still and closed, the small window shut, the last of the evening light gone. I had taken the test in the afternoon, alone, the way I did everything in this house, and I had sat on the bathroom floor for twenty minutes afterward unable to move, just pressing my spine against the cool wood of the cabinet and breathing, because the thing I was looking at was not possible and was also undeniably real.
Two pink lines.
He had told me I was barren. Not once but over and over, in the particular way Callum delivered cruelty, which was never shouting, never dramatic, always quiet and factual, as though he were correcting a report. Three years into the marriage, when I had finally worked up the courage to suggest fertility tests, he had looked up from his laptop and said, without any particular heat, "Roza, I think the problem is less medical and more that you are simply not the kind of woman men want children with." He had gone back to his screen after that. I had gone to the bathroom and turned the shower on and sat on the tiles and cried until the water went cold.
That was four years ago. I had not raised the subject again.
Now I picked up the test and looked at it in the bathroom mirror, holding it next to my own face, and I thought about those four years. The fertility apps I deleted so he would not see them. The prenatal vitamins I hid in a coat pocket. The nights I lay awake in the dark on my side of the bed, which was the only side he allowed me, counting backwards from the date of my last cycle and telling myself it was fine, it was just stress, it would happen when it was meant to happen.
It had happened.
Something moved through me then, hot and sudden and nothing like the sadness I had been living inside for years. It was fury. Clean and precise and very, very quiet. The kind that does not need to raise its voice because it has already decided what it is going to do.
He was wrong. He had always been wrong. And tonight I was going to walk through that study door and show him the evidence in my hand and watch his face change.
I smoothed my dress. I looked at myself in the mirror, properly, the way I had stopped doing years ago because his voice had made me afraid of my own reflection. I was full-figured and auburn-haired and my eyes were green in good light, and I was carrying the thing he had told me I could never carry, and I was done.
I wrapped the test in a square of tissue and held it in my hand and walked out of the bathroom.
The landing was dark. The study light showed under the door at the end of the hall. I could hear something behind it, low and indistinct, and I thought at first it was the television. I raised my hand to knock.
Then I heard her laugh.
The sound went through me like cold water. I knew that laugh. I had known it for twelve years. I lowered my hand and stood in the dark hallway for three full seconds while something in my chest began to understand what my mind had not yet caught up to.
I opened the door.
Roza pov I did not answer him right away. “Who were you running from, Roza?” The words sat between us in the cold bookshop air, and I felt my own pulse in my throat. Douglas had gone quiet behind the counter, pretending to sort receipts he had already sorted twice. The woman who had walked in asking about atlases was still standing near the door, unaware she had interrupted something that mattered. “I was not running from anyone,” I said. “I was just leaving somewhere that stopped being good for me.” Soren studied me the way he studied the strange old books Douglas kept in the back, like he was trying to work out what edition I was, what was worth underneath the cover. “That is not really an answer,” he said. “It is the one I have.” He nodded slowly. He did not push, and I felt the space where the questions should have kept coming, and something in me both relaxed and ached at the same time. I wanted him to ask again. I hated that I wanted that. “Fair enough,” he sai
POV: RozaEdinburgh did not feel like running away. It felt like breathing for the first time in years. The cold here was sharper than London, but it felt honest. My new room was small. The boiler knocked at night. A bakery below opened at half past five and filled the street with the smell of bread before sunrise. A tabby cat sat on the windowsill across the street every morning, watching the world like it had nowhere else to be.I did not miss my old life, Not for one second.I was ten weeks pregnant. My body was already changing in small, secret ways. Tiredness hit me in waves. Certain smells turned my stomach without warning. And under all of it sat something I had not let myself feel in years. Hope. Small and careful, the kind you protect with both hands.I found a bookshop by accident, looking for somewhere warm to sit. It sat between a dry cleaner and a chip shop, easy to walk past if you were not looking. The owner was an old man named Douglas. He wore the same burgundy jumper
POV: RozaI gave myself two days.Two days to move through the house carefully, taking only what was mine, the clothes, the books with my name written in the front covers, the small framed photograph of my parents that had lived on the guest room shelf because Callum had not wanted it anywhere more visible. Two days to do it quietly and thoroughly and without leaving a single thing behind that I would one day need to come back for.I should have been faster.Gemma arrived on the second morning with a key.I heard the front door before I heard her. The specific sound of someone entering a house they consider theirs, no knock, no pause, just the turn of a lock and the swing of a door. I came out of the bedroom and looked down the stairs and she was in the hallway below, unwinding a cashmere scarf from her neck and hanging it on the hook where my coat had lived for seven years. She looked up when she heard me."Morning," she said. "Callum said you were still sorting your things. Take you
POV: RozaI did not sleep.I sat on the floor of the guest bathroom with my knees pulled up and the pregnancy test in my lap and I watched the night move through the frosted window, black to dark blue to the flat, exhausted grey of a London morning that did not care what had happened in this house. The boiler clicked. A fox barked somewhere on the street below. The house was quiet in the specific way it always was when Callum was in it, every sound careful, every silence loaded.At some point I heard his footsteps on the landing. Then the master bedroom door closing. Then nothing.I thought about my mother.She had married a man who did not love her when she was twenty-two and spent the next thirty years being grateful he stayed. She used to say, "You earn your place, Rosalind. A woman always has to earn her place." She had said it like wisdom. Like something she was giving me. I had believed her so completely that I had spent seven years in a house that was not mine, in a marriage th












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