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Tuesday, 6:00 PM

Author: Januar Storm
last update publish date: 2026-04-21 05:24:12

I came home from the warehouse at six.

I want to be exact about the time because everything I did that evening and everything I did not do has the shape of the clock around it, and I have thought about the clock many times.

Six to six-thirty I put away a delivery. An etching I had brought back from a client in Carroll Gardens. I wrapped it in a layer of glassine and laid it flat against the living room wall because I did not like leaving other people’s things in the van overnight, even in a climate-controlled van, even in November. I did this while Derek was still at work.

Six-thirty I started the oven.

Six-forty I opened a bottle of wine and poured myself a glass and did not drink from it. I have thought about this too. Why I poured the wine I was not going to drink. I did not have a good answer. I think I wanted the kitchen to look like a woman lived in it who was relaxed.

Seven I started the chicken.

I made chicken that night instead of pasta. I want you to know that. I made chicken because I had made pasta the Tuesday before, and because ten months after the burner I had developed an internal calendar of which dishes could follow which dishes without drawing Derek’s attention, and chicken on the Tuesday after pasta on the Tuesday before was the correct move.

I added thyme.

I had bought the thyme at the bodega on the corner that morning, along with two lemons, and I had told the man behind the counter that I was making chicken, and he had said something kind about how his wife made chicken with thyme, and I had smiled and taken the paper bag and walked out, and for twenty seconds on the sidewalk I had felt like the woman the man at the bodega had seen.

Seven-fifteen Derek’s key turned in the lock.

Quick.

I heard it and my whole body registered the quickness and a piece of me a small piece, the part that had stopped watching, the part that was new since the word in the journal said okay. A quick turn was a good mood. A quick turn was the version of tonight in which he sat on the couch and watched the game and I did not have to do anything complicated. A quick turn was the easiest version.

I should have kept watching.

He kissed me on the cheek.

He said, "Smells good."

He went into the living room.

Seven-thirty we ate at the kitchen table.

He was not quiet at dinner — that I noticed — but he was also not talking. He was in the between space, the one I had never bothered to map because the between space had usually resolved itself, over three years, into one mood or the other within an hour. He ate two pieces of the chicken. He complimented the thyme. He asked me, in a casual way, what I had done that afternoon.

I told him about the etching.

I told him the name of the client. I told him how much I was being paid. I told him the kinds of details Derek liked to hear because they let him feel like he was part of my work without having to be part of it, and I ate my chicken and I drank half a glass of the wine I had poured an hour earlier, and by eight o’clock we were both in the living room. He was on the couch. I was in my chair.

Eight-fifteen he started drinking.

Not the wine. A different bottle, from the cabinet he kept locked that I had the key to but never used. The first drink was fine. He poured it, he drank it, he poured another. I kept my book open in my lap and I turned a page now and then and I did not read a single word on any of them.

The second drink was fine.

The third.

Eight-forty he got up, went into the kitchen, came back with the bottle in his hand and the glass in his other hand and the look on his face that I had learned to read the way a farmer reads the color of a sky.

The weather had changed.

I had not caught it changing.

That was the thing. That was the moment I realized, too late, that I had stopped watching, and that the specific consequence of having stopped watching was that I was not going to be able to get out in front of tonight the way I had always gotten out in front of nights. The whole architecture of three years had rested on me watching. The word in the journal had taken my eyes off the weather, and the weather had arrived in the room before I knew to brace for it.

Nine I was still in my chair.

He was still on the couch. He had not yet said anything. That was not good. On his bad nights Derek usually talked early a warm-up, a small cruelty, something to take the temperature of the room before the larger thing and the fact that he was drinking in silence meant the warm-up was internal. He was rehearsing a sentence. He would deliver it when the sentence was ready.

Nine-fifteen he said the first thing.

"You left the paper bag on the counter."

From the bodega. The thyme and the lemons.

I said, "I know. I’ll get it."

He said, "No. Stay in the chair."

I want you to understand what that meant. Derek had never in three years referred to my chair as a thing he was telling me to stay in. He had never once acknowledged, in any of the small hundreds of times I had moved to and from that chair, that the chair was a place I went on purpose. Him telling me to stay in it that was new. That was the sentence he had been rehearsing. He had understood something about the chair. He had figured out, finally, in the specific cruelty of his silences, that I had been sitting four strides away from him on purpose for two years and two months, and tonight he had decided to name it.

Nine twenty-nine he said the second thing.

"Is there a reason you don’t sit near me anymore?"

I said, "I’m reading."

He said, "You are not reading. You have not turned a page in twelve minutes. I have been watching you not turn pages for twelve minutes."

I heard myself say, "Derek."

Just his name. In the voice I had used to say his name a thousand times across three years the careful, apologetic, de-escalating voice, the voice Derek had trained me to use the way you train a dog and the strange thing was that even as I said it, I heard how small the voice was, and I understood, in the same moment, that I had been using a small voice for so long that I had forgotten the shape of the larger one.

Nine thirty-eight he stood up.

He stood up with the glass in his hand.

I closed the book.

My body had its own intelligence by then, separate from my mind, faster than thought. My feet found the floor. My shoulders pulled in. My eyes went to the exit points of the room in order of accessibility. The front door. The window behind me. The hall. The kitchen. None of them were reachable before he crossed four strides.

I had measured four strides.

I had forgotten, in two years and two months, that the four strides worked both ways.

Derek crossed them.

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