The coffee maker sputtered to life at 6:40 a.m., its familiar gurgle the only sound in our kitchen.
I stood by the counter, watching the dark liquid drip into the pot, my hands wrapped around my own empty mug for warmth. Mark sat at the table behind me, his thumb scrolling across his phone screen—email after email, I assumed. The blue light from his device cast shadows across his face.
We hadn't said good morning. We hadn't said anything at all.
I cracked two eggs into the pan, the sizzle filling the silence between us.
The smell of butter and frying eggs should have felt comforting, domestic even, but instead it felt like I was cooking for a stranger. I plated the eggs carefully, the yolks still soft the way he used to like them, and carried them to the table.
"I'll be home late," Mark said, standing abruptly as I set the plate down. "Don't cook my dinner."
He leaned down and pressed his lips to my forehead—a reflex, not a kiss. His hand squeezed my shoulder, a gesture that might have looked affectionate to anyone watching. But I felt the distance in it, the way you'd pat a coworker on the back.
"Okay," I said.
He walked past the eggs I'd made, reached into the basket on the counter, and grabbed a protein bar instead. The door clicked shut behind him, and I stood there, staring at the untouched plate. The eggs were already starting to congeal at the edges.
I sat down and ate them myself, mechanically, tasting nothing.
—
The drive to school was gray and cold, the sky pressing down like a weight. My hands gripped the steering wheel tighter than necessary, my knuckles white. I'd just merged onto the main road when my phone rang through the car's speakers.
Michelle.
I considered not answering. But that would only make things worse.
"Hi, Michelle," I said, forcing brightness into my voice.
"Claire, good, I caught you." Her tone was brisk, efficient. "I need you to pick up some things for me this afternoon. I'm hosting the neighbors this weekend, and I'm swamped. Just a few groceries—I'll text you the list."
"I—" I hesitated, searching for the right words. "It's been a tough week. Midterms just finished, and I have a lot of grading to catch up on—"
"Claire." She cut me off, her voice sharpening. "You're wasting time on things that don't matter. The school will survive without you hovering over every little assignment. Your family needs you."
My throat tightened. "I understand, but—"
"Mark is working himself to the bone right now. Surely you're not expecting him to take care of household things on top of everything else?" She paused, and I heard her exhale, a sound heavy with disappointment. "Mark told me you've been overwhelmed lately. Maybe you should try a little harder."
The words landed like stones in my chest.
"You know, Claire, in our family we don't let things fall apart like this."
I opened my mouth to respond, but nothing came out. What could I say? That I was drowning? That I couldn't remember the last time Mark and I had a real conversation? That I was barely holding myself together?
"I'll text you the list," Michelle said, her tone final. "Thank you, dear."
The call ended.
I pulled into the school parking lot and sat there, hands still on the wheel, staring at the brick building in front of me. My vision blurred. I pressed my palms against my eyes, willing myself not to cry, but the tears came anyway—hot and silent, streaking down my cheeks.
After a few minutes, I pulled down the visor mirror and wiped my face. My eyes were red, my mascara smudged. I dug through my purse for concealer and did what I could to cover the damage.
Then I got out of the car and walked into the building.
—
The rest of the day was a blur of small humiliations. I logged midterm grades until my eyes stung. A parent called to complain that I wasn't giving her son "enough reading support," implying I'd failed him somehow. I didn't have the energy to argue. I just apologized and promised to do better.
Then came the meeting.
The principal stood at the front of the room, his expression somber. "Budget cuts," he said. "We're looking at eliminating one teaching position per grade level next year."
The room went still.
I felt the air leave my lungs. Twelve years of marriage. Thirty-seven years old. And now this.
After the meeting, I stood in the hallway for a long time, staring at the bulletin board covered in student artwork. Bright colors, hopeful messages. *You can do it!* one poster said, decorated with glitter and smiley faces.
I wished I believed it.
—
When I finally got home, the house was dark. Mark's car wasn't in the driveway.
I didn't bother turning on the lights. I went straight to the fridge, pulled out the sandwich I'd picked up on the way home, and sat down in front of the TV, not really caring what was on.
The blue glow painted my shadow on the wall—a solitary figure hunched over a sad dinner. The house felt cavernous around me, every corner filled with silence.
I was halfway through the sandwich when I realized I was cold.
Mark's favorite blanket, the thick wool one his mother had given us for our anniversary years ago, lay folded on the back of the couch. I reached for it, needing something, anything, to ward off the chill that seemed to come from inside my bones.
But the blanket was damp.
Cold and damp from the laundry I'd forgotten to move to the dryer this morning. I stood there holding it, this soggy symbol of all my small failures, and felt something break inside my chest.
The sandwich fell from my hands as the tears came again, harder this time. I clutched the wet blanket to my chest and sobbed—for the marriage that had become a series of missed connections, for the job that felt more like survival than purpose, for the woman I used to be who had somehow gotten lost in the shuffle of other people's expectations.
What was the point?
What was the point of any of this—the silent breakfasts, the thankless job, the marriage that felt more like a business arrangement between two people too tired to try anymore?
What was the point of any of this? This marriage, this life, this endless, suffocating routine?
Did I even have a reason to keep going?





