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Chapter 7 - The night he left

Author: Dakota Quinn
last update publish date: 2026-04-30 08:33:55

People always think the worst part is the moment something breaks.

The shouting. The betrayal. The door slamming.

They don’t account for the quiet.

Maya wakes up because it’s too quiet. Not the outside quiet. That’s been wrong for days, a thin, stretched silence over something that used to be loud.

This is different.

This is the absence of a person.

She knows it before she opens her eyes.

Emotional truth: something is wrong.

There’s no deflection.

There isn’t time.

She sits up.

“Dex?”

Nothing.

The mezzanine is empty on his side. Blanket pushed back. No shape where he should be. No slow, even breathing she’s been counting like it meant something.

Maya swings her legs over the edge. Climbs down.

“Dex?”

She says it louder this time. The warehouse gives it back to her, flat and uninterested.

She already knows.

Her body knows.

That quiet, precise part of her that’s been doing the math for days has finally stopped pretending there might be another answer.

Still, she checks. Of course she checks.

Door. Closed. Unlocked.

Her stomach drops a fraction. He never leaves it unlocked.

Except—

Except he’s not coming back.

Maya opens it. Steps outside.

The street is empty in that new, resigned way. No movement. No immediate threat. Just the distant suggestion of a world continuing badly without them.

Without him.

Without them.

She looks left. Right. Nothing.

No Dex-shaped outline jogging back with an apology and a story and something in a plastic bag. No version of this where he says, “I just went for a walk.”

Maya closes the door. Locks it. Slides the bolt into place with a careful, deliberate motion.

Then she turns. And she sees it. The space where his bag was.

Empty.

She stands there for a second. Just long enough for the picture to resolve.

Then she moves. Fast now.

Not frantic. Not yet.

Purposeful.

She goes to the supplies. Food crate first. Opens it. Counts.

One.

Two.

Three tins.

That’s wrong.

That’s—

She stops. Breathes. Counts again.

Three.

Protein bars: one.

Half a jar of peanut butter, scraped so clean it’s almost admirable.

Maya nods.

“Okay,” she says.

Her voice sounds normal.

That’s… interesting.

Fuel.

She crosses to the canisters.

One.

There is one.

The other is gone. Not half. Not light.

Gone.

Medicine.

She opens the kit. Bandages: minimal. Painkillers: almost none. Antiseptic: barely a swallow left at the bottom of the bottle.

Maya closes the lid. Very gently.

Emotional truth: he took what she needed to survive.

There’s a beat where something should rise up: anger, grief, something loud enough to match the size of what just happened.

It doesn’t.

What comes instead is a kind of clarity so sharp it almost feels like relief.

Of course he did.

Of course he did.

The seam shows there. A crack in the pattern. No joke arrives to cover it. No quick deflection. Just the thought, naked and clean: He chose himself.

Maya exhales.

It shakes, just once. Then she straightens.

There’s a piece of paper on the desk.

Folded. Placed. Not hidden.

Of course there is.

She walks over. Picks it up. Unfolds it.

Maya,

I’m sorry.

I didn’t know how to say this.

It’s not safe here anymore. I found somewhere better. There are people. Real structure. They’re taking in small numbers, and I had to make a call.

A call.

Maya’s mouth twitches. Not quite a smile. Not anything useful.

I took what I could carry. You’re strong. You’ll figure it out. You always do.

There’s a pause in the handwriting there. A hesitation pressed into the ink.

This isn’t about you.

Maya lets out a small sound.

There it is. There’s the humor. Thin. Sharp. Slightly wrong.

“Of course it’s not,” she says to the empty room. “Why would it be about me. That would be unreasonable. Inconsiderate, even.”

She looks back at the page.

I didn’t want to leave like this but there wasn’t time.

There was time. There were days. There were conversations that didn’t happen.

You’ll understand.

Maya folds the note.

Once.

Twice.

Neatly.

Places it back on the desk. Exactly where it was. Because of course she will. Because even now, some part of her is still maintaining order, like the arrangement of paper might retroactively make the decision less… what it is.

She stands there.

In the middle of the warehouse.

The systems she built for two now laid out around her like a joke she accidentally told herself.

Emotional truth: she has been left.

No deflection. It just sits there. Heavy. Simple. Complete.

Sharper truth. Late, slower than usual: He waited until it would hurt the least for him.

Maya nods.

“Smart,” she says.

It lands flat. Accurate. Useless.

She moves again. Because stopping is not an option she has ever been particularly good at.

Back to the crate. Back to the water. Back to the numbers.

Inventory.

She pulls everything out. Lines it up. Counts. Writes it in her head.

Three tins. One bar. Half peanut butter. One fuel canister. Minimal medicine. Water, still enough. For now.

She runs it again. Slower. Careful. Precise.

Like maybe this time the numbers will blink and rearrange themselves into something survivable.

They don’t.

Of course they don’t.

Maya sits back on her heels. Looks at what’s left.

The quiet presses in again. Not the absence of him. The presence of everything he took.

That’s louder. That’s… measurable.

She inhales.

Exhales.

Then she does it one more time.

Inventory.

Because that’s what she does.

Because numbers don’t lie.

Because if she keeps counting, maybe she won’t have to think about anything else.

Three tins.

One bar.

Half a jar.

One canister.

Not enough.

She already knows what it says.

She counts it anyway.

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