The day before her wedding, my sister smiled and said the best gift I could give her was to disappear for a while. So I did exactly that. I sold the condo she already thought was hers, placed an envelope at every guest’s table, and by the time dinner began, the truth was ready to open.

The day before her wedding, my sister smiled and said the best gift I could give her was to disappear for a while. So I did exactly that. I sold the condo she already thought was hers, placed an envelope at every guest’s table, and by the time dinner began, the truth was ready to open.

I whispered into the empty air that I had done my part. That loving someone did not mean destroying yourself for them. That sometimes letting go was the only way to save what little remained. Then I got to work. I took new photographs of the rooms for the listing agent, checked the utilities, and noted a few repairs that needed quick attention. As I walked through the hallway, I felt lighter. Not happy, but certain. Certainty had a weight of its own, but it was a weight I could carry.

On my way back downstairs, I ran into one of the neighbors, Mrs. Jensen, an older woman with kind eyes who had lived in the building for years. She smiled when she saw me. She said she had missed seeing me around and asked if I was moving back in. I told her I was finalizing a sale. Her face fell for a moment and she said she used to love seeing me and Evelyn working together on weekends, that we had reminded her of her own daughters. I gave her a small smile and said life had taken us in different directions. She nodded gently, not pushing.

I left the building and stood by my car, letting the breeze cool my face. On the drive home, the sun dipped low behind the rooftops, and I felt like I was moving through the final steps of a past life. That evening, after sending the photos to my attorney and confirming the listing price, I sat at the dining table again with my hands wrapped around a glass of water. Everything was in motion now. The sale. The truth. The growing fracture between me and Evelyn. And yet one thing remained undone. One thing sat at the center of this unraveling.

Gavin.

 

 

 

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