تسجيل الدخولThe clinic waiting room had seven people in it.
I counted them twice. I had been counting things since I was a child — ceiling tiles, parked cars, the seconds between streetlights on a night drive. It was what my brain did when it needed somewhere small to live. Something manageable. Something with a definite answer.
Seven people. All wearing the same studied neutrality. All performing the same quiet fiction of being somewhere ordinary.
So was I.
Daniel had come in with me that morning. He had parked the car and walked me through the entrance and sat beside me in the waiting room with a coffee from the machine down the hall — fixed exactly how I took it, without being asked. For twenty minutes I had sat next to him and felt something in my chest go still and quiet with relief. He was here. He had shown up. Maybe I had been wrong about the rest of it. Maybe I was always wrong when I was scared.
Then his phone buzzed.
He looked at the screen and said five minutes and went back through the glass doors.
That was forty-five minutes ago.
I had been called through to change. I had walked the corridor alone. Now I sat on a narrow examination table in a paper gown, holding my phone, telling myself he was in reception right now, confused about which room, asking someone at the desk.
I was not going to open I*******m.
I had made that decision on the drive over. I was going to be present today. I was going to get through this one day without looking for things to hurt me. I was going to put the phone away and breathe and let today just be what it was.
I opened I*******m.
The notification was forty-nine minutes old. My thumb moved before my brain caught up with it.
The photo loaded slowly. Then all at once.
Daniel was on one knee on the floor of Maison Laurent.
My favourite restaurant. The one he had taken me to for my birthday three years in a row. The one I had always, privately, thought of as ours.
The lighting was amber and warm and the kind of deliberate that doesn't happen by accident — someone had planned this, had chosen this room and this table and this light. He was looking up at Claire, who stood above him with both hands pressed over her mouth, tears already catching the light, her entire body radiating the joy of a woman receiving something she had always known was coming.
The ring in the box was large and clearly chosen with care.
The caption was just the date. And a ring emoji.
I read it three times.
I read it a fourth time because my brain kept refusing to finish the sentence.
He had been here. He had left me in a waiting room in a paper gown and driven directly here. To our restaurant. To propose to a woman he had told me was just a colleague. While I sat on this table. While I waited for him to come back through those glass doors.
He was never coming back through those glass doors.
My hands were steady. That was the strange part — my hands were completely, eerily steady while my whole life rearranged itself around me into a shape I didn't recognize.
I got down from the table.
I dressed in the small curtained cubicle, slowly and carefully. I folded the paper gown and set it on the chair. I don't know why I folded it — habit, maybe, or the need to leave something neat behind me even when everything else was falling apart. I straightened it. I picked up my bag. I walked out.
The nurse said my name. I said I'm sorry, I have to go and I kept walking. Through the waiting room, past the small green plant in the corner that someone watered every day, through the glass door and out into the cold.
I started walking. No direction. No plan. My body just moved.
The city went on around me — a bus, two women arguing, a dog sniffing at a lamppost — and none of it reached me. I moved through it like weather.
I thought about my mother's voice. I just don't think he sees you, baby. And my own voice, so certain, so dismissive: you don't know him like I do.
I thought about my sister driving four hours to take me to lunch and spending the whole meal not saying his name, and then at the end holding both my hands across the table and saying you can always come home. I had laughed it off. I had felt sorry for her, for not understanding what Daniel and I had.
I thought about every friend who had quietly disappeared. Every birthday I had missed. Every plan I had cancelled. Every small, quiet piece of myself I had folded up and put away to make room for a man who was currently celebrating his engagement at our restaurant while I bled alone in a clinic hallway.
The road opened up in front of me.
I stepped off the curb without looking.
I was somewhere else entirely — years back, my mother's face — and I didn't see the headlights or hear the engine or register anything at all until a hand grabbed my arm and yanked me back so hard I stumbled, and the car tore past with its horn already fading behind it.
I stood on the pavement.
I was breathing.
The hand was still holding my arm.
Maya's POVThe phone rang at seven in the morning and I knew from the hour alone that it was not good news.Sarah did not call at seven in the morning for ordinary things. I answered before the second ring."Bouchard Holdings pulled the sponsorship." Her voice had the specific quality of controlled fury, the flatness of someone who is managing something they are very angry about because losing the management would cost more than it was worth. "The spring showcase is cancelled. The venue is locked."I sat up. Léo's hand found my back in the dark, the automatic steadying of someone who had learned to read the quality of my silences."What clause?" I said."Brand alignment. Standard escape hatch but the timing is deliberate. Two weeks out. Buyers confirmed, press committed, the full lineup announced last week." A pause. "I traced the connection. The Bouchard shipping contract went through Ashford and Associates eighteen months ago. Daniel saved his margins on the eastern routes. The favo
Léo's POVThe reception area of Ashford and Associates was the kind of space designed to communicate importance before anyone had said a word. Polished marble, expensive furniture placed with the care of someone who understood that arrangement was a form of argument, lighting calibrated to make the visitor feel that they had arrived somewhere that took itself seriously.Léo walked through it with the crutch at his usual measured pace. The receptionist looked up and then looked at the closed glass door to the inner office and then back at him, and whatever calculation she ran produced the result that she pressed the access button without speaking.The door clicked open.Daniel was at the window with his back to the room. He did not turn when the door opened, which was a choice.Léo closed the door, set the crutch against the wall, and sat in the chair opposite the desk. The chair was lower than it should have been, which was also a choice. He ignored it."Close the door," Daniel said,
Elena's POVThe afternoon had settled into its quiet working rhythm, the needle moving through the wool hem in the particular even pace that Elena's hands found when her mind was elsewhere and the work was handling itself. The light through the south window had shifted to the low, amber register of late afternoon, crossing the worktable at an angle that told her it was past four without her needing to check the clock.The scars on her palms pulled slightly in the damp weather. They always did. She had stopped noticing this the way you stopped noticing things that had simply become part of the conditions.Colette was sorting buttons across the table, separating them into the shallow tray by size with the quiet absorption she brought to tasks that other people found tedious. The little girl was in the corner with her crayons, her tongue pressed to her lip, the crayon moving across the paper with the purposeful deliberateness of someone who had a specific thing in mind and was committed
Chloe's POVThe afternoon bell released the school into the particular noise it made when everyone had been inside for six hours and had strong opinions about that. Children pushed through the gates in clusters. A football rolled across the pavement and two boys argued over it in the way of people who had been arguing about this specific thing for considerably longer than the current afternoon. A teacher clapped her hands with the expression of someone who knew it was not going to work and was doing it anyway out of professional obligation.Chloe walked through all of it at her usual pace. Marcus arrived on time. There was no reason to move faster than her usual pace.She saw the car from the pickup lane entrance. Black sedan, wrong angle, everything screaming wrong. Not Marcus. The window was already coming down before she had fully processed the rest of it.Daniel leaned across the passenger seat wearing the bright, easy expression of a man who had decided how this conversation was
Maya's POVLéo had fallen asleep on the sofa with the blueprints on his chest.I came out of the cutting room at half past eleven and found him like that, the pencil still loose in his hand, his head back against the cushion. The physical therapy had been three times this week and he never said it was hard but I could see it in the way he moved through the latter part of each day, the slight economy of motion that meant he was managing something he had decided not to complain about. He had pushed the morning session later twice this week so that he could be at the site when the frame went up, and I had not argued about this because I knew what the site meant to him and because arguing about it would have cost him more energy than the session itself.I lifted the blueprints off him carefully, rolled them, and set the pencil on the side table. He stirred."You should be in bed," I said quietly.His eyes opened. "I was waiting.""The work will be there in the morning.""I wasn't talking
Daniel's POVHe read the message twice.Then he set the phone on the desk and looked at the wall and thought about the fact that he had been outmaneuvered by a five-year-old and the woman he had spent eight years treating as a permanent convenience, and that both of them had done it without raising their voices.He picked up the phone and threw it at the sofa. It hit the arm and dropped to the floor. He looked at where it had landed. That had accomplished nothing, which he had known before he threw it, but the body sometimes insisted on doing useless things when the mind could not locate a useful one.He went to the window.Verlaine was below him in its usual configuration, indifferent. He had built three buildings visible from this floor. He had designed them, had his name on them, had been photographed in front of them for industry publications. The city had accommodated all of this without requiring anything from him beyond the work and the money, which was the correct transaction
Maya’s POVThe After collection launched on a Wednesday.I had chosen Wednesday deliberately.Wednesday carried no performance. No expectation of spectacle. It was a working day—neutral, unadorned. The people who came on a Wednesday came because they intended to, not because attendance itself meant
Daniel’s POVChloe told me.Not in the way you might expect.Not with a preamble, not with any sense that she understood the weight of what she was saying.She arrived at the Tuesday handover wearing a small friendship bracelet, and when I asked about it, she said Léo had made it for her from lefto
Elena’s POVShe sent me a photograph.Just her hand.Taken on the cutting table in the loft, the morning light coming from the left, the way it always did at that hour—clean, directional, revealing without being harsh.The ring on her finger.No caption.No message above or below.Nothing that expl
Maya’s POVI told Sarah on a Sunday morning.I had intended to wait.To sit down properly. To arrange the moment in a way that gave it shape.But I walked in still wearing my coat, and she was at the kitchen table with a mug and the crossword from the previous week—the one she worked through slowly







