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The Quiet Day

Author: Januar Storm
last update publish date: 2026-06-21 03:19:10

Saoirse POV

Saturday I did what I had told myself on Friday I was going to do.

I bought the book on Friday afternoon walked into the store on Cortelyou, went to the back, took it off the shelf at the Cs, and carried it to the counter and paid for it like a woman buying a book, which is a small ordinary act I had not performed in three years. The girl at the register put it in a paper bag. I carried it home. I put it on my own shelf, in my own apartment, in the spot I had cleared for it.

I did not open it Friday night.

I had decided the book was for Saturday.

On Saturday I took it to the café.

──

I want to tell you about the reading, because the reading was the entire point of the day, and the day was the last fully quiet day I was going to have for a long time, though I did not know that yet.

I sat at the window seat at the café on Cortelyou my window seat, the one I had been sitting in on Saturdays, the one I had been sitting in when his attention had come in behind me two weeks ago and my body had known before my mind. I ordered coffee. Black, no sugar, the second-coffee-of-the-day order I did not know he knew about. I opened the book to the first page.

My mother’s word was there. *Saoirse,* and the small heart, in her slanted hand.

Underneath it, in pencil, very faint: *yours.*

I looked at the two words for a while the mother who gave me the book at the start of my life, and the man who gave it back to me in the middle of it and then I turned past the title page, and I began to read.

I read for two hours.

I want to tell you what reading for two hours was, because it was a thing I had genuinely believed, somewhere in the three years of the marriage, that I had lost the capacity for. The capacity to sit in a public place and be inside a book for two hours, uninterrupted, unsurveilled by my own anxiety about whether the reading was going to be used against me later, unmonitored by the part of my brain that had spent three years tracking the location and mood of a man in my house that capacity had gone dormant. I had assumed it was gone. People lose things in marriages like mine and assume the things are gone, because the assuming is less painful than the hoping.

The capacity was not gone.

It came back, on a Saturday, at a window, with a coffee, in two hours that belonged entirely to me.

I read the book I had loved at twenty-three, in the body of a woman of twenty-nine who had come most of the way back to herself, and the book was still the book, and I was still underneath everything that had happened to me still the woman who had loved it.

That was the gift of the quiet day.

──

At one forty PM my phone buzzed on the table.

A text from Priya.

I almost did not look at it. I had been, for two hours, in a state I did not want to leave. But the phone was face-up, and the first line of the text was visible without my opening it, and the first line was not a first line I could leave unread.

The first line said: *Random work question, don’t worry about it, but —*

I opened the text.

The full message read: *Random work question, don’t worry about it, but do you remember when I told you about the AI thing at the office, the escalation queue? I pulled some of my old case referrals this week for the annual review and a few of them have these closure notes that don’t make sense to me. Like the cases just … closed. No DA action, no follow-up, nothing. I asked the account manager about it and he got weird. Probably nothing. Anyway. Thai tonight still? I’m bringing the good curry.*

I read it twice.

I set the phone down.

──

I want to tell you what happened in me, because what happened in me was the specific cold thing I had been learning to recognize across this autumn, the thing I had felt at the deadbolt at two AM and at the buzzer when Eddie Doyle’s voice came through it.

The floor shifted.

Priya had started pulling on the thread.

Not because anyone had pointed her at it. Not because of anything Marcus had done, or anything I had done, or any move in the careful four-day architecture either of us had built. Priya had started pulling on the thread because Priya was good at her job, and the annual review had put her old case referrals in front of her, and a competent victim advocate looking at a set of high-risk cases that had simply *closed* no DA action, no follow-up, nothing was a woman who was going to ask the account manager about it, and the account manager was going to get weird, and the getting-weird was going to tell Priya, at the level her instincts operated on, that there was a thing behind the closure notes that the account manager did not want to discuss.

Marcus had told me, in his front room, that the second queue was invisible without an internal source-code audit nobody had reason to conduct.

He had not accounted for Priya.

He had not accounted for the specific danger of a woman who escalates cases into a system and then, a year later, in the ordinary course of her own diligence, goes looking for what happened to them.

Priya was not auditing the source code.

Priya was auditing the *outcomes,* and the outcomes were the thing the source code produced, and a sufficiently stubborn audit of outcomes was going to arrive, eventually, at the same place a source-code audit would arrive, by a different road.

Priya was on the road.

She did not know she was on it.

She thought she was asking a random work question on a Saturday afternoon before bringing me the good curry.

──

I picked the phone back up.

I looked at the message for a long moment, and I made in the small space of a Saturday afternoon, at a café window, with the book I loved open on the table in front of me the first genuinely strategic decision of my Act of this story.

I did not warn her off.

I had the instinct to. The instinct said: *tell her to drop it, tell her the account manager is probably just incompetent, tell her annual review is a waste of time and to close the file and bring the curry.* The instinct was the protective instinct, and the protective instinct wanted to steer Priya away from the thread before the thread led her somewhere that would break her.

I did not follow the instinct.

I did not follow it because steering Priya away from the thread would require me to lie to her again, more actively than I had lied to her yet, and because and this was the thing I understood at the window, the thing that was going to shape everything that came after Priya had a *right* to the thread.

Priya had escalated Derek.

Priya had, without knowing it, set in motion the night that freed me. Priya was a participant in the most important event of my life and she did not know she was a participant, and she was, on her own, by her own competence, beginning to find her way toward the knowledge. And I had decided, somewhere between the second AM on the kitchen floor and this Saturday at the café, that I was not going to be one more person who managed Priya away from a truth she had every right to walk toward.

I was going to have to tell her.

I had told Marcus, in his front room, *we are going to have to tell her, not tonight, but soon.*

Soon, I understood, sitting at the window, had just gotten closer. Soon was no longer a thing Marcus and I were going to schedule. Soon was a thing Priya was going to arrive at on her own, on her own timeline, and the only choice I had left was whether she arrived at it alone, from an account manager who got weird, or whether she arrived at it from me, across a table, with the good curry between us and fifteen years of friendship to hold it.

I typed back: *Thai tonight yes. Bring the good curry. I want to talk to you about something too.*

I sent it.

I looked at the message after I sent it, and I felt the specific weight of having, for the first time in this entire autumn, moved toward a truth instead of away from one.

I closed the book.

I paid for the coffee.

I walked home through the Saturday to wait for my best friend, and the curry, and the conversation I had spent two months making sure we would never have to have, and which I had just, in a single text, decided we were going to have after all.

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