A Love Unwritten
stling of papers and the rare murmur from the clerk. One single ceiling fan whirred in a soft hum; its monotony heightened the stil
composed, detached, as though nothing could reach beneath the surface. She had long stopped trying to understand
ered. Today, those walls wou
nce, serene and matter-of-fact. "Are both part
ady, though her fingers tighten
ded curt
te. He handed the papers to the clerk, barely glancing
ur years of enduring cold indifference, of longing for warmth that neve
ght, almost surreal. Gathering her belongings, she hesi
, her voice carrying no malice, no
luded her. Surprise? Regret? It happened too fast for her to reall
from the courthouse, each step feeling like she was
outside, the cool air hitting her. The air was lighter and
clicking on the stone. The street bustled with life; the hum of th
han, her little brother or maybe a walk in the park-a very long
ouse. Adam hadn't followed her out. She hadn't expected him to.
e. She didn't need his acknowledgment, his approval, or e
s of her new life. Maybe she'd go back to school, finish the degree she'd put on hold. Maybe she
that she didn't notice the scree
nd of a car slamming into something. The impact sent her sprit was quickly replaced by a strange numbness. She tr
he became aware of voices-shouts, gasps,
n she s
d
contorted in panic and fear; his eyes, always so cold and d
ands trembling as he reached out to her.
o tell him she was fine, to reassure him, but the words w
d low, her voice barely a
orld faded
, his hands stained with her blood. The metallic scent clung t
watched
ir faces as they emerged from the operating room had
t of her loss had fallen on him and was crush
n of her eyes, carrying with grace despite everything, the softn
erything he had done-or failed to do-she ha
r gratitude. He hadn'
of his spiraling thoughts. He pulled it out an
hand, he answer
ice demanded, sharp with worry.
s voice was devoid of emotion, as if saying the wor
nned silence on
r started, her tone
" he snapped, his voice harde
tossing the phone onto the chair beside him.
gged on, Adam ma
it all over again, he wouldn't w