LOGINThey chose the morning.Not because it was symbolic, but because it was quiet in a way evenings no longer were. The city had not yet fully decided what it wanted from the day. Light moved slowly across the room, unambitious and forgiving.Lillian woke first.She did not lie still out of habit. She lay still because there was nothing she needed to prepare for. No words to rehearse. No outcome to anticipate. The decision had already been made.Nathaniel woke moments later, sensing rather than hearing the shift beside him. He turned toward her, eyes still unfocused, and smiled faintly.“Now,” he said, more statement than question.“Yes,” she replied.
They did not talk about the interview the next morning.Not because it lingered awkwardly, but because it had already settled into place. Like most things now, it did not demand analysis. It had been done honestly. That was sufficient.The day unfolded gently. Nathaniel left earlier than usual, not for urgency but for a breakfast meeting he had agreed to weeks ago. Lillian spent the morning at Bloom House, then returned home before noon, carrying a small bundle of unused stems she planned to dry.It was while she arranged them in a shallow bowl that the thought surfaced.Not sharply. Not painfully.Just clearly.They had never revisited how their marriage began.
They came in pairs.Two physicians first, quiet and efficient, coats pressed, expressions carefully neutral. A nurse followed with a tablet and practiced calm. They spoke softly, as if volume itself might fracture somethin
Lillian woke without pain.That was the first thing she noticed. No ache behind the eyes. No sharp panic in her chest. Just a vast, unsettling emptiness that felt deeper than exhaustion. As if something essential had
The lock clicked softly.It was not a dramatic sound. No metallic finality. Just a quiet confirmation that what followed would not be interrupted, diluted, or escaped.Lillian fel







