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Conversations we kept avoiding

作者: Somawritesss
last update publish date: 2026-06-20 18:28:03

 Alexandria’s POV

We hadn’t talked about the marriage itself.

Not directly. Not in the way that required naming what it was and what we wanted it to be going forward. We’d talked around it constantly — through the therapy updates and the board proposal and the nursery and the piece and the hundred small daily things that were themselves a kind of conversation. But the direct one, the one where we sat down and looked at the actual structure of what we were to each other and what we wanted to remain, we’d been circling it for weeks.

I think we were both afraid of what naming it would do.

That’s the thing about living inside something that’s slowly getting better — sometimes you don’t want to examine it too directly in case the examination breaks it. Superstition dressed up as caution.

The conversation happened on a Sunday.

Not planned. Nothing significant ever seemed to happen on schedule in this house. We’d had breakfast, the ordinary kind, and Jamie had gone to the study and I’d been in the nursery adjusting the mobile that kept tilting slightly to the left, and somewhere around eleven I came downstairs and found him not in the study but standing at the kitchen window looking at the garden with his coffee going cold in his hand.

He turned when he heard me.

“I’ve been thinking,” he said.

“About what.”

“About what you want.” He set the coffee down. “From this. From us. Going forward.” He looked at me steadily. “I realized I’ve never actually asked you. I’ve been doing things — the therapy, the changes, the proposal, the piece — and I’ve been hoping they were adding up to something that meant you’d stay. But I’ve never asked you what staying means to you. What you need it to look like.”

I stood in the kitchen doorway and looked at him.

“You’re asking now,” I said.

“I’m asking now.”

I came to the island and sat down. He stayed where he was by the window, giving me space, and I appreciated that he understood space was still sometimes what I needed even inside an honest conversation.

“I need to not disappear,” I said. “That’s the base of it. I need to exist in this marriage as a full person. Not as an accessory or a function or a reputation management tool.” I looked at my hands on the counter. “I spent five years becoming smaller to fit into the shape you needed and I’m not going back to that. Not for anything.”

“I know,” he said.

“I need the writing to be mine. The advocacy work. The platform. My name on things. None of that goes back into a box.”

“It doesn’t,” he said. “It won’t.”

“I need you to keep going to therapy. Not forever necessarily but until the work is actually done and not just until things feel better, because things feeling better is not the same as things being different.”

“I know the difference,” he said. “I’m staying.”

“I need us to be honest with each other when things are going wrong. Not months later, not after it’s calcified into something cold. When it’s happening.” I looked up at him. “That’s going to require both of us to be uncomfortable in real time. I’m willing to do that if you are.”

“I am,” he said. Simply.

I looked at him. At the window light behind him and the coffee going cold and the man who had once described me as a liability standing in his kitchen asking me what I needed.

“What do you need,” I said. “You asked me but I’m asking you back.”

He looked slightly surprised. Like he hadn’t expected the question to return.

“To be trusted,” he said after a moment. “Not automatically. I know I haven’t earned automatic. But to be given the chance to earn it and to have that be a real chance rather than a test I’ve already been failed in advance.”

That was fair. I’d been doing that some days, looking for the angle in things he said, waiting for the version of him I knew to surface and invalidate the new version. It was understandable and it was also something I needed to be honest about.

“I’ll work on that,” I said. “It’s going to take time.”

“I know,” he said. “I’m not asking for overnight.”

“What else,” I said.

He thought about it. “To matter to you. Not as the father of your child or the provider of the house or the person funding your advocacy work. Just—” He stopped. Found it. “To matter to you as a person. The way you matter to me.”

The kitchen was very quiet.

“You do,” I said. It came out softer than I intended, which meant it was true. “You have for a long time. Even when I was planning to leave, even when I was in that hospital bed alone, you mattered to me. That was part of what made it so painful.”

He held that.

“I didn’t know that,” he said.

“You would have if you’d asked.”

“I know.” He looked at the garden. “I’m asking now.”

“I know you are.” I shifted on the stool, thirty weeks making everything a negotiation. “Jamie. I’m not going to stand here and tell you I’ve forgiven everything. I haven’t. Some of it I’m still carrying and I’ll probably carry some of it for a long time.”

“I know.”

“But I’m in this. Not because of Catherine and not because I have nowhere to go — you should know by now that I’d figure out somewhere to go if I needed to.” I looked at him directly. “I’m in this because what we’re building right now is something I want to be in. It’s not perfect and it’s not finished and some days it’s still hard.”

“Some days,” he said.

“Most days it’s—” I searched for the word. “It’s mine. This life. It feels like mine in a way it didn’t for years. And you’re part of it in a way that feels like a choice rather than a trap.”

He looked at me for a long time.

“That’s everything,” he said quietly.

“Don’t make it bigger than it is,” I said. “It’s where we are today. Tomorrow we check again.”

“Every day we check again,” he said.

“Every day,” I agreed.

Catherine moved. The way she moved lately — significant, full, like someone who had run out of patience with being contained and was making plans.

We both registered it simultaneously and something passed between us that was almost a smile, the shared kind, the kind that belonged to both of us.

“She’s impatient,” Jamie said.

“She gets that from you,” I said.

He looked at me with those blue eyes and the open face and ten years of history behind us and whatever came next ahead of us.

“Stay,” he said. Just that. The same word he’d said the morning I’d had my hand on the door with my suitcase packed. Except different now. Not desperate, not controlling. Just honest.

“I’m staying,” I said.

Not as surrender.

As a choice.

The best kind.

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