Chapter Two: The Divorce she didn’t fight

944 Words
Aira read the papers slowly, even though she already knew what they said. The words were clear. Too clear. Every sentence neat and final, like the people who wrote them had never loved anyone before. Mutual Agreement for Dissolution of Marriage. She kept going back to the title, her eyes snagging on the word mutual as if it might change if she stared long enough. It didn’t. Nothing about this was mutual. Lucien had decided. She had nodded. That was how most things between them worked. The apartment was quiet in that uncomfortable way that made every small sound feel louder than it should be. The hum of the refrigerator. The faint ticking of the wall clock. Even her own breathing felt intrusive. She sat at the dining table, still wearing the sweater she’d slept in because changing clothes felt like too much effort for a day like this. The table had been her choice. She remembered that clearly. Lucien had barely looked up from his phone when she showed him the picture, just said, “If you like it, get it.” She used to think that meant trust. Now she knew it meant he didn’t care enough to argue. Her gaze drifted back to the papers. The settlement was generous—almost excessively so. The apartment. A large sum of money. Enough to live comfortably, enough to make sure she wouldn’t ever need to ask him for anything again. Lucien had always believed problems could be solved cleanly. Quietly. With numbers. Her fingers trembled slightly as she traced the edge of the page. She hadn’t realized how tense she was until she noticed the dull ache in her shoulders and the pressure building behind her eyes. It felt like she’d been holding herself together for too long, afraid that if she loosened her grip even a little, everything would fall apart. Three years. She tried to pinpoint when the marriage had started slipping away, but there wasn’t a single moment she could blame. No explosive fights. No dramatic betrayal. Just distance. Silence. Evenings spent alone in a house meant for two. She had learned how to eat dinner by herself. How to celebrate birthdays quietly. How to convince herself that love didn’t need words to be real. Aira swallowed. The pen lay beside the papers. Lucien’s pen. Sleek, heavy, expensive. She recognized it immediately. He must have left it there intentionally, already confident she would sign. She picked it up. For a brief moment, she hesitated—not because she wanted to refuse, but because a foolish thought crept in. If I don’t sign… will he stop this? The answer came just as quickly. No. Nothing would change. He wouldn’t suddenly realize he loved her. He wouldn’t fight for something he had already decided was unnecessary. Her grip tightened around the pen. She signed her name. The sound of ink scratching against paper felt oddly loud in the quiet room. When she finished, she stared at her signature, half-expecting it to look different. Smaller. Uneven. Like it belonged to someone weaker. But it looked normal. That hurt more than she expected. She set the pen down carefully, aligning it with the edge of the table. She didn’t know why she bothered. Maybe because control, even over something that small, felt important right now. She sat there afterward, staring at nothing. Letting memories drift in uninvited. Waiting up for him. Pretending she wasn’t disappointed. Telling herself patience was the same thing as love. Footsteps echoed from the hallway. Lucien entered the dining room already dressed for the day, suit pressed, expression calm. He stopped when he saw the signed papers in front of her. “You’ve signed,” he said. It wasn’t a question. “Yes,” Aira replied. Her voice sounded steady, and she hated that it did. She didn’t want him to think this hadn’t mattered. Lucien picked up the papers and skimmed them, as if checking for errors. “You didn’t ask for any changes,” he noted. “There was no need.” He paused and finally looked at her properly, his brows drawing together slightly. “You’re very calm,” he said. Aira met his gaze. She almost laughed. Calm wasn’t the word she would have chosen. Empty felt closer. “I’ve had time to think,” she said instead. That seemed to unsettle him. He had expected resistance. Tears. Accusations. Something that would make this feel heavier. Instead, she looked like someone who had already mourned what was lost. “This is for the best,” Lucien said after a moment. “For both of us.” Aira nodded. The movement felt automatic. “Yes,” she said quietly. “I think so too.” He gathered the papers and turned toward the door. Halfway out, he paused. “You don’t need to move out immediately,” he added. “Take your time.” She watched his back as he left, the sound of his footsteps fading down the hallway. When the apartment fell silent again, something inside her loosened. Not enough to break—just enough to hurt. She pressed a hand to her mouth as a wave of nausea rose suddenly, sharp and unexpected. She leaned forward slightly, breathing through it, confused. She hadn’t felt sick earlier. She hadn’t eaten much, but still— Her hand drifted down to her stomach without thinking. “It’s nothing,” she whispered. But the feeling lingered. Lucien Blackwood had walked away without looking back. And Aira sat alone at the table, divorce papers signed, realizing that this was only the beginning of something she wasn’t ready to face.
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