After The Divorce, His Ultrasound Celebration Fell Apart In One Call-kimochi

The divorce ended at 9:18 a.m. on a Friday.

That was the official time on the county filing receipt, printed in gray ink at the bottom of the page my attorney slid into a folder marked CLIENT COPY.

It felt strange that ten years of marriage could end with something so ordinary.

Image

A timestamp.

A staple.

A clerk’s stamp.

The conference room smelled like burnt coffee, lemon polish, and toner from the printer in the corner.

Outside, downtown Chicago had that cold winter shine that makes every window look sharper than it should.

I sat across from Preston Hale, the man who had once promised me we would grow old in the same kitchen, and watched him check his phone for the fourth time in twelve minutes.

My name is Eliza Mercer.

I was thirty-four years old, and for most of my marriage, I had confused endurance with devotion.

Preston and I had two children, Mason and Lily.

Mason was quiet in the way children become quiet when they notice adults reward silence.

Lily still ran toward doors when she heard footsteps, because she kept hoping her father might be on the other side.

That morning, they were sitting in the reception area with coloring pages and a box of crayons the paralegal had found in a drawer.

They deserved a father who remembered they were waiting.

Instead, Preston was waiting for another woman to call.

The final decree sat between us.

The custody stipulation sat under it.

My attorney had arranged everything in clean stacks because he believed in order, even when the room itself felt ugly.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *