Chicago in March made heartbreak feel physical. The wind cut through my coat, my skin, whatever fragile structure had kept me upright for the last twenty minutes. I made it halfway to the corner before my knees weakened.
Daniel caught up but kept a respectful distance.
“I’m sorry,” he said.
I stared at the passing traffic. “Which part?”
He gave a hollow laugh. “Take your pick.”
For a while, we said nothing. Cars passed. Somewhere behind us, a siren rose and faded. Through the restaurant windows, I could still see movement—staff, guests, shadows shifting in agitation. Andrew was probably still arguing. Men like him always believed disaster was negotiable.
Daniel finally spoke. “I didn’t stop you because I wanted a scene. I stopped you because I’d already seen how this goes wrong.”
I looked at him.
“Three weeks ago, I confronted Vanessa too early,” he said. “She cried, apologized, swore it was over. Then the next morning she moved money out of our joint account and deleted half her messages.” He exhaled slowly. “This time I wanted facts first.”
That hit harder than anything else that night.
Facts first.
Not shouting. Not public humiliation. Not begging a liar for one more explanation. Facts.
“My dad’s a divorce attorney,” Daniel added. “The useful kind, not the billboard kind. If you don’t have someone, I can text you his number.”
I should have refused. I should have gone home and cried and told myself I needed time. But something inside me had already shifted. The woman who had walked into that restaurant with an anniversary gift no longer existed.
“Text me,” I said.
My phone buzzed almost immediately.
At first I thought it was Daniel. It was Andrew.
Please come home so we can talk.
Then another message.
It isn’t what it looked like.
Then a third.
Don’t do anything drastic until I explain.
I stared at the screen until my thumb went numb.
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