Her Ex Wanted the Old Gas Station—Then Ruth Opened the Panel-heuh

The courthouse hallway smelled like old paper, floor wax, and coffee that had gone bitter on a warmer.

Ruth Macklin stood with a cardboard box against her hip and listened to her attorney say the last sentence of her marriage like it was a weather report.

“This is the asset schedule,” he said, sliding the paper across the courtroom table. “You retain the Ford pickup, personal effects, and the real property located at Route 11, Goshen County.”

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Ruth looked down at the page.

Her name was printed neatly beside Dennis’s.

Thirty-three years had become signatures, initials, and a list of things somebody else had decided were important.

Dennis had not even come to court.

He sent his lawyer instead.

It was almost impressive, Ruth thought, how thoroughly a man could leave without ever having to watch what leaving did.

Dennis kept the house on Brier Creek.

He kept the savings, the retirement accounts, the investment portfolio, and the woman he had been seeing while Ruth was still buying his cereal, folding his shirts, and pretending not to smell another woman’s perfume in his truck.

Ruth kept the rusted Ford pickup, a cardboard box of personal effects, and Macklin Gas and Service.

The gas station had been closed for twelve years.

Her father, Earl Macklin, had left it to her when he died, along with a deed, three keys, and a property tax folder Ruth had never opened without Dennis standing over her shoulder.

Dennis had always called the place dead weight.

“Sentimental junk,” he used to say, as if her father’s name on a sign was only clutter.

And Ruth, as usual, had not argued.

That was one of the quiet tragedies of her life.

Not one big surrender.

Thousands of small ones.

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