The wife I forgot to love

Cassidy arrived on a Saturday morning with two coffees and no warning.

This was standard. Helena had stopped expecting warnings from Cassidy around the time she turned twenty-three and accepted that her sister operated on her own schedule and considered a text sent five minutes before arrival to be more than adequate notice.

"I was in the area," Cassidy said when Helena opened the door.

"You live on the other side of the city," Helena said.

"I was in the area emotionally," Cassidy said and walked in.

Helena stepped aside and let her through. Cassidy handed her one of the coffees without looking at her and walked into the apartment the way she always walked into spaces, taking inventory, her eyes moving across the room with the particular focus of a woman who noticed things and could not help noticing them.

She stopped in the middle of the living room.

She looked at the Christmas photo on the windowsill. At the rosemary jar beside it. At the good knife on the counter and the small plant Helena had bought three weeks ago and put on the kitchen ledge where the light came through in the mornings. At the throw blanket folded over the back of the couch and the stack of scripts on the coffee table with handwritten notes in the margins.

She looked at all of it without saying anything for a moment.

"What," Helena said.

"Nothing." Cassidy turned around. "It just looks like someone lives here now."

Helena looked at her apartment. She had stopped seeing it the way she saw it the first night. The neutral walls and the nobody smell and the furniture that could have belonged to anyone. It still looked like a rental. The bones of it had not changed. But somewhere over the past weeks it had started feeling like hers in the way that spaces feel like yours when you have been present inside them long enough and with enough intention.

"Sit down," Helena said.

They sat at the small table the way they always sat. Cassidy with both hands around her cup. Helena with one hand on the table and one around hers.

"You look different," Cassidy said.

"You said that last week," Helena said.

"It was true last week and it is more true this week." Cassidy looked at her steadily. "Not different bad. Different like yourself. Like the version of you that existed before you spent two years making yourself smaller to fit inside someone else's life."

Helena looked at her coffee.

"I was not smaller," she said.

"Helena," Cassidy said gently.

Helena was quiet for a moment. Then she said, "Maybe a little smaller."

Cassidy nodded. She did not push it. She picked up her coffee and drank and let the moment settle.

"Tell me about the set," she said.

And Helena's face did something that Cassidy noted immediately and carefully and did not comment on yet. It opened. Not dramatically. Just the way a window opens when someone finally reaches the latch they have been trying to find. Something in Helena's expression that had been held carefully in place for months just quietly released.

"It is good," Helena said. "It is really good Cassidy. Jordan is." She stopped. Started again. "I did not know I could do it the way I am doing it. I thought I would be performing the whole time. Faking my way through it. But it does not feel like that. It feels like the most honest thing I have done in years."

"That does not surprise me," Cassidy said.

"It surprises me," Helena said.

"I know." Cassidy smiled. "That is the thing about you. You have always been the last person to know what you are capable of."

Helena looked at her sister. At the face she had known her whole life. At the woman who had driven over at ten at night with nothing and sat on a bed and held her hand and never once made her feel like a burden for needing it.

"Thank you," Helena said. "For all of it. The beginning especially."

"You do not have to thank me for that," Cassidy said.

"I want to," Helena said simply.

Cassidy looked at her for a moment. Something moved across her face that was not quite a smile and not quite tears but lived in the space between them. She picked up her coffee.

"Tell me about the car park," she said. "Damian."

Helena had known this was coming. Cassidy had not brought it up since the night it happened, which had been its own kind of restraint that Helena appreciated more than she had said.

"He wanted to be friends," Helena said.

"And."

"I told him I did not have anything against him but I was not looking for a friendship." She paused. "He looked at me like he was trying to find something and could not find it."

"What was he trying to find," Cassidy said.

"The old version," Helena said. "The one who would have been glad he showed up."

Cassidy was quiet for a moment. Then she said, "And how did that feel. Him not finding it."

Helena thought about it honestly. "Fine," she said. "It felt fine. Which is the most useful thing I have discovered about myself lately. That fine is actually fine now and not just what I say when something is not fine at all."

Cassidy looked at her for a long moment.

"Good," she said quietly. "That is exactly where you should be."

They sat for another hour. Cassidy talked about work and a person she had been seeing for three weeks who she was cautiously optimistic about and did not want to jinx by discussing too specifically. Helena listened and asked questions and laughed at the right places and felt the particular warmth of an ordinary Saturday morning with her sister in a kitchen that was starting to smell like hers.

When Cassidy left she hugged Helena at the door for slightly longer than usual.

"Call me," she said.

"You never wait for me to call you," Helena said.

"Call me anyway," Cassidy said. And left.

Helena closed the door.

She stood in the quiet of her apartment for a moment. Then she walked to the window and looked out at the city doing its Saturday things below her. The market stalls being set up on the street corner. A couple walking a dog. Someone eating something out of a paper bag on a bench.

She looked at the rosemary jar on the windowsill. At the Christmas photo beside it. At the small plant on the kitchen ledge catching the morning light.

She looked at all of it.

And for the first time since she had moved in she did not think of it as the neutral apartment.

She thought of it as home.

It was a small word. She had lived inside a bigger version of it for two years and that version had had better furniture and more space and a garden out the back that she had planted herbs in the first spring because she read somewhere that rosemary grew well in that kind of soil.

This version was smaller and the walls were still neutral and the furniture still could have belonged to anyone.

But it was hers.

She was in it and she meant to be in it and that made all the difference.

She turned away from the window and picked up the script for Monday's scenes and sat down on the couch with the throw blanket across her legs and started reading.

Outside the city went about its Saturday.

Inside Helena Graves went about hers.

And that was enough. For now that was exactly enough.

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