The wife I forgot to love

Helena had not been expecting anything on Saturday.

That was the best thing about Saturdays now. They asked nothing of her. No call time. No Jordan. No lines to run. Just the city and her own company and whatever she decided to do with eight hours that belonged entirely to herself.

She had walked to the market on the east side the way she had been doing most Saturday mornings since she moved into the apartment. She liked the market. She liked the noise of it and the particular smell of it and the way it required nothing of her except presence and small decisions. This cheese or that one. These herbs or those.

She bought rosemary because she always bought rosemary now.

She bought a coffee from the stall she liked and walked back through the east side streets with her bag and her coffee and the cool clear morning around her.

She turned the corner onto Greystone Avenue without thinking about it.

It was a route she had taken a hundred times before. The market was on the east side and her apartment was north and Greystone Avenue was the most direct way between them. She had walked it before the divorce and she walked it now and it was just a street. Just a corner. Just the ordinary city going about its Saturday.

She turned the corner and saw them.

They were outside the café on the ground floor of the building on the left. The good café. The one with the small round tables outside that caught the morning sun when there was morning sun to catch. Damian was sitting with his back to her. Camila was across from him facing the street.

It was Camila who saw Helena first.

Their eyes met for exactly one second across the pavement.

Helena did not stop walking.

She did not slow down.

She did not change her expression or her pace or the way she was carrying her coffee. She just kept walking the way she had been walking before she turned the corner, with the same unhurried ease of someone who had somewhere comfortable to be and was not in any particular hurry to get there.

Camila's eyes tracked her across the pavement.

Helena did not look at her again.

She looked straight ahead and kept walking and was past them in four seconds and around the next corner in eight and then they were behind her and the street ahead was just the street ahead and she kept going.

She felt something.

She took stock of it honestly the way she had learned to take stock of things.

It was not pain. It was not the hollow breathless feeling she had expected to feel the first time she saw them together. It was something quieter and more final than pain. The feeling of a thing being exactly what it is and you having no argument left with that fact.

They existed. They were together. That was true.

And she was here. Walking to her apartment with rosemary in her bag and coffee in her hand and a life that was hers in every direction she looked.

That was also true.

She turned onto her street.

She went upstairs and put the rosemary in the jar on the windowsill and stood in her kitchen and drank her coffee and looked at the city outside and felt completely and entirely fine.

Which was the realest kind of fine.

She thought about calling Cassidy. Then decided against it. Not because she did not want to talk to her sister. Just because there was nothing to report. Nothing had happened. She had turned a corner and seen two people at a café table and kept walking. That was the whole story. There was no version of that worth a phone call.

She had a script to read and a Monday to prepare for and an afternoon that was entirely hers.

She put her coffee down and picked up the script.

Outside the sun had found its way properly through the clouds and was doing something warm and honest with the kitchen window the way it only did on Saturday mornings when she had nowhere to be.

She read three scenes.

She made notes in the margins.

She was fine.

Behind her on Greystone Avenue Damian had turned around.

He had felt something. He could not have said what exactly. Just a shift in the air the way you sometimes feel a shift before you understand the reason for it. He had turned and looked at the pavement and seen the last of her. The back of her. The way she walked now, which was different from the way she used to walk and he could not have explained the difference except that it was there.

He had turned back to the table.

Camila was looking at him.

Not with anger. Not with accusation. Just looking at him with her steady careful eyes and the particular expression she used when she was storing something away for later. She was very good at storing things away for later.

"Was that Helena," she said.

"Yes," he said.

Camila looked at the street where Helena had been. Then back at Damian.

She picked up her coffee.

She did not say anything else about it.

But she kept looking at him for the rest of the morning with those eyes that missed nothing and stored everything.

And Damian drank his coffee and looked at the table and said nothing and felt the question from the night before sitting in his chest again without an answer.

Had she always been this person.

Or had he left and she became her.

He did not know.

But he was starting to think the answer mattered more than he was ready to admit.

He looked at Camila across the table.

She was scrolling through something on her phone now. The moment had passed for her on the surface. She was good at that. At absorbing things and moving past them outwardly while storing them somewhere internal where they would surface later at a time of her choosing.

He knew her well enough by now to know that this was not over.

She would not bring it up today. She was too composed for that. But it was filed. Noted. The way Helena had walked. The way Damian had turned without knowing he was going to turn. All of it filed and waiting.

He ordered another coffee.

He sat with Camila in the morning sun and talked about the afternoon and what they might do with it and was present and attentive and normal.

But something had changed in the air between them in the space of four seconds and eight steps and one exchanged glance across a pavement.

Not broken. Not dramatic.

Just different.

The way a room is different after someone has been in it and left.

Across the city in a small apartment with a rosemary jar on the windowsill Helena put on music and started reading her script for Monday and did not think about Greystone Avenue again.

Not once.

And that was the most significant thing of all.

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