Sunday passed with a deceptive calm that led Matthew Calloway to believe, at least for a few hours, that life was finally giving him a break. He had promised his mother a walk, not a hurried visit between meetings or a distracted lunch interrupted by phone calls, but a real walk, slow and leisurely, through one of Denver's old public parks, where the trees still retained the serene dignity of having witnessed entire lives unfold beneath their branches. Helen walked beside him, her hand intertwined with his arm, her steps careful but steady, and she spoke of everyday things like the changing weather and how the ducks near the pond had grown bold enough to approach strangers. Matthew listened, nodded, smiled when appropriate, but inside he felt an emptiness that no contract or achievement had ever managed to fill.
Six months earlier, his software company had crossed a threshold few ever reached, transforming him overnight into a man whose name appeared in financial headlines and whose fortune aroused equal parts curiosity and envy. He owned properties he rarely visited, traveled without queues or delays, and lived surrounded by amenities designed to eliminate any discomfort. Even so, as he watched a young couple push a stroller by, he felt a tightness in his chest, a quiet ache that had nothing to do with money. His marriage to Paige Sullivan had ended a year before, not with shouting or betrayal, but with exhaustion and silence, and no amount of success had managed to convince him that the loss didn't matter.
"You seem to be in another world," Helen said softly, adjusting her scarf. "Success shouldn't weigh so heavily on a person."
Matthew chuckled briefly and tried to change the subject, but before he could, they rounded a bend in the road and the world shifted. On a wooden bench beneath a large maple tree, a woman slept curled slightly on her side, her posture protective, her face gaunt with exhaustion. Beside her was a triple stroller, and inside, three babies slept peacefully, surrendering to the tranquility of infants who rely solely on the rhythm of their breathing. Matthew stopped so abruptly that his mother nearly tripped. The revelation hit him mercilessly. The woman was Paige.
Time didn't stop, but it slowed down enough to make every detail unbearable. The distant laughter of children blended into the noise, and the breeze rustling through the leaves seemed unreal. Paige had left for Europe after her divorce, determined to build something meaningful in her own way. Seeing her there, thinner, exhausted, asleep on a park bench next to three babies, shattered the story she had clung to in order to keep going.
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