I hadn’t listened. I was young, and I thought her caution was merely an inability to be happy for a daughter who had found the “bright” life she never had.
The radiance lasted exactly eighteen months. After that, the light didn’t go out; it simply became… domestic. There were no dramatic betrayals, no bruises, nothing I could tell my friends to garner a round of drinks and sympathy. It was a slow, glacial erasure. It was the way his armchair sat in the exact center of the living room, a throne that demanded the most space. It was the way my books were relegated to the bottom shelf, my jacket pushed to the hook closest to the wall, my weekend plans always a footnote to his.
“It’s not the right time for children,” he would say, year after year. “Not enough money. You’re still young.”
I believed him at first. Then I stopped believing and started waiting. Eventually, the waiting became a habit, and the habit became the very air I breathed. For the last two years, he had become a specter, arriving late with vague excuses of “meetings” and “clients.” I stopped asking questions, not because I feared the truth, but because I had forgotten how to demand it. You lose your voice in increments, so slowly you don’t even notice the silence until it’s absolute.
When I had returned home three weeks ago with the biopsy results, Evan hadn’t even looked up from his phone. “So, get the surgery,” he’d said, his thumb flicking across the screen. “It’s scheduled. It’s not like it’s life or death.”
I had gone to the consultation alone. I had signed the consent forms alone. I had packed my bag alone. And this morning, I had called a cab to reach the bus stop because Evan had an “important meeting” he couldn’t postpone.
The clinic was a three-story relic of the 70s, modern siding masking a heart that still smelled of linoleum, bleach, and the dim, yellowed light of hospital corridors. At the front desk, a nurse named Brenda Sanchez looked over my documents, her face tightening with a sudden, professional embarrassment.
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