Inicio / Romance / THE GOODBYE HE MISSED / CHAPTER 1: THE ANNIVERSARY

Compartir

THE GOODBYE HE MISSED
THE GOODBYE HE MISSED
Autor: Kennywrites

CHAPTER 1: THE ANNIVERSARY

Autor: Kennywrites
last update Fecha de publicación: 2026-06-15 06:12:46

"You forgot," she said, like a confirmation.

Adrian's hand was still on Olivia's shoulder when he looked up, and the guilt surfaced on him like a bruise taking form. First the recognition, then the defensiveness, then that look, that particular look Sophia had spent ten years learning to hate.

The one that meant he was already putting together the explanation, already building the architecture of a reason.

She stood in the doorway of his corner office and let him look at her. The emerald dress, The heels, The fact that it was 9:17 PM and their reservation had been for seven.

Olivia Hart sat on the leather couch with her hands pressed to her chest, trembling in that precise, birdlike way she had, Her blonde hair was coming undone. Her eyes, when they noticed Sophia, filled immediately and thoroughly with tears.

Sophia looked at her. "What is it this time?"

"Sophia" Adrian started.

"I'm asking Olivia." She kept her voice even, courtroom calm. "The last time it was a nightmare. Before that, a panic attack. There was the week of the curtains, I remember that one particularly.

Marcus and Olivia had picked out curtains together six years ago, and she found the receipt and needed you to come over and help her feel less alone. You missed Ethan's first soccer game for that one." She paused. "What is it tonight?"

Olivia's breath hitched, a small, wounded sound. She made a movement as if to stand, a performance of leaving that never quite completed itself.

Adrian stepped between them.

That was the tell, It always had been. The way his body moved. automatically, instinctively, to position itself as her wall.

"That's enough," he said.

"Is it?"

"She's grieving. Marcus's anniversary is next week."

"Marcus's anniversary is always next week." Sophia walked into the office. She did not look at the dress in the reflection of his floor-to-ceiling windows. She did not look at the table she had booked three weeks ago, the reservation she had confirmed that morning, the text she had sent at noon that he had read and not answered. "I've been keeping a list, Adrian. Would you like to hear it?"

"Sophia, don't."

"Ethan's science fair. You missed it because Olivia needed furniture assembled." She kept her voice very quiet, very precise. "His parent-teacher conference. Her car wouldn't start and you had to drive her to a mechanic. His birthday last March, which one was that? I can't remember the reason anymore. I've run out of the ability to retain them."

"Those were emergencies. You know I would never…"

"Do you know what I told our son?" She stopped.

"I told him you were held up at work. Every time. Eight years old, and he already knows 'held up at work' is code. He told me last week that he knows you have a busy job and it's okay and he doesn't mind." She let that sit between them. "An eight-year-old has learned to preemptively comfort himself about his father's absence. I taught him that. Because the truth would have been worse."

Olivia spoke from the couch, her voice thread-thin. "It's my fault. I know it's my fault. I'm just after Marcus, I have no one. I'm so…"

"You have been a widow for five years," Sophia said, turning to look at her directly. "Five years, Olivia. You've mourned your husband for five years. That's real. I have never questioned the grief." She paused. "But I have been a widow for our entire marriage. And no one mourns for that."

The office went completely quiet.

Adrian's hand dropped from Olivia's shoulder.

Sophia watched him process it, the specific quality of the silence, the thing she had never said aloud in ten years of thinking about it. She watched him try to find the angle where he was still the reasonable one.

"I have never cheated on you," he said.

"I know."

"I have never…"

"I know, Adrian." She looked at him steadily.

"You've never touched her, You've never crossed that line. I know. But you married her anyway. Without divorcing me first." She gestured between them, between all three of them, this triangle they had been living in for half their marriage. "Emotionally. Spiritually. In every way that a marriage is actually built from, she is your wife. I am the woman who keeps your house."

"That is not…"

"Your son calls your office when he wants to reach you because you don't answer your personal cell.

He has learned to go through Margaret because Margaret is more reliable than his own father." Her voice did not break. She had been building walls against the breaking of it for years. "He keeps a picture of you in his backpack. Did you know that? I found it when I was packing his lunch last Tuesday. A picture from three years ago, a birthday you actually made it to. He carries it like a lucky charm."

Adrian sat down heavily on the arm of the couch.

Olivia reached for his hand. He didn't quite let her take it.

"I don't know what you want from me," he said.

"I know you don't." Sophia picked up her clutch from where she had set it on his desk. "That's the problem. After ten years, you genuinely don't know."

Her phone rang.

She glanced at the screen. Northside Elementary School. Her stomach turned over in a way that was distinct from fury, distinct from grief, colder than either.

She answered, She listened, She heard the words pediatric, collapsed, ambulance already called, on their way to St. Michael's, and she did not sit down. She did not make a sound. She held the wall of herself very carefully in place until the call was over.

She looked at Adrian. He was still on the arm of the couch. Olivia's hand had found his forearm.

"Our son collapsed at school," Sophia said. "They're taking him to the hospital."

He was on his feet immediately. "Sophia…"

She held up her hand.

He stopped.

She looked at him, for what felt like the first time in years. The man she had married, The man who had missed her son's soccer games and science fairs and birthdays, and was still, even now, standing a foot from Olivia Hart.

"Don't come," she said. "You'll want to, But think about it honestly, Adrian. Think about what you'll do when you're in that waiting room and her name comes up on your phone, Think about who you'll choose." She dropped her hand. "We already know the answer. Don't put Ethan through watching you choose it in real time."

"He's my son"

"Then start acting like it."

She walked out.

The elevator took a year. She stood in it, straight-backed, hands at her sides, and let the floors count down. In the parking garage, she found her car. She started it. The GPS had St. Michael's loaded before she reached the exit.

She drove with both hands on the wheel and the radio off and the city blurring past her windows, and one thought circling her mind like a wound she couldn't stop pressing.

If Ethan dies tonight, his last memory of his father will be a missed anniversary of which his father was spending the time with a woman who is not his mother.

She drove faster.

Continúa leyendo este libro gratis
Escanea el código para descargar la App

Último capítulo

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 11: THE WEIGHT OF A PROMISE

    Victor Kane showed up at Adrian's office at 7 AM on a Tuesday and didn't knock. He never knocked. He said men who knocked were men who were afraid of what they'd find. Adrian was already at his desk. He had not slept well in two weeks, which felt like appropriate punishment. He looked up when the door opened and felt, as he always did when Victor entered a room, that the room had just been claimed by someone with a better right to it. Victor sat down across from the desk without being invited. He straightened the crease in his trousers. He looked at Adrian the way a man looks at something he has been patient about for a very long time. "Tell me about the night Marcus died," he said. Adrian went still. In five years, no one had asked him this directly. Not Victor, not the family, not the grief counselor Sophia had found for him once, whose sessions he had attended twice and then stopped. The night existed in him like a splinter, too deep to remove, too present to ignore. "You kno

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 10: THE CONFRONTATION

    Sophia saw Olivia before Adrian did. She was out of Ethan's room before Olivia reached the end of the hall. Through the glass wall, the pale blue dress registered first — soft, deliberate, the fabric of a woman who had dressed herself to look like something breakable. Then the hair, loose and just slightly disheveled, the kind of disheveled that took effort to achieve. Then the expression, already arranged, already waiting to dissolve into tears the moment it found an audience. Something in Sophia went very still. For ten years she had been gracious. She had made excuses on this woman's behalf at dinner parties, absorbed her tears at family gatherings, smiled through canceled plans and reshuffled holidays and a hundred small humiliations she had folded quietly into the architecture of her marriage rather than name them out loud. She had allowed Olivia Hart to become the third presence at her own table and said nothing, swallowed everything, performed understanding long after she had

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 9: OLIVIA'S GAMBIT

    Olivia Hart had never once in her adult life been ignored for four days straight. It was a new experience. She did not intend for it to last. She sat on her couch, his couch, technically, the one he'd had delivered when she moved into this apartment, the one in the building he owned three floors of and stared at her phone, willing it to light up with his name. It had been doing that for five years, reliably, predictably, like a tide she'd learned to set her clock by. For four days, nothing. At first she'd told herself he was simply consumed. The boy's surgery, the hospital, Sophia's demands on his time. Of course he was distracted. He would call the moment he had a free hour. He always called back. In five years, he had never once gone this long without responding. He had not called back. Her texts had moved through their natural progression — worried, anxious, wounded, then, by day three, sharper than she meant them to be. I can't believe she's keeping you from your own son

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER: RECOVERY

    Ethan opened his eyes six hours after surgery and asked for chocolate pudding. Sophia laughed for the first time in two weeks and it felt wrong in her chest, like a sound made by someone else. "You're not supposed to want food yet," she said, smoothing his hair back from his forehead. "You just had heart surgery, mister." "I'm hungry." He blinked slowly, the anesthesia still loosening his words at the edges. "Chocolate. Not Vanilla's gross." "I'll see what I can do." He drifted back under within minutes, but the request stayed with her the rest of the day, a small, ordinary, miraculous thing. A boy who wanted pudding. A boy who was alive enough, hungry enough, himself enough to have an opinion about flavors. His vitals held steady through the afternoon. Dr. Reyes checked in twice and used the word textbook both times, which Sophia turned over in her mind like something precious. Color returned to his face by evening, not all at once, but in increments she could chart almost hou

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 7: THE SURGERY

    For four days, Adrian honored Sophia's banishment. He hated every minute of it. He stayed away anyway. He called the hospital every few hours, a ritual that had replaced sleep. The nurses were polite and gave him exactly as much as protocol allowed. stable, resting, no change and nothing more. He understood. He had been told to stay away, and the staff had clearly been told the same thing in return. He called Sophia's cell on the second day. Blocked. He stood in his condo at two in the morning holding his phone, staring at the notification that told him so, and felt something he recognized, distantly, as the specific shame of being locked out of his own family by his own choices. He considered going to the hospital anyway. Showing up, sitting in the waiting room, daring anyone to make him leave. He got as far as his car keys on the third night before Victor's voice surfaced in his memory, "you've spent your whole life trying to fill shoes that were never meant for you" and beneat

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 6: THE BANISHMENT

    Sophia waited until Adrian's footsteps faded down the corridor before she let herself fall apart. She gave herself five minutes. Then she washed her face and went back to her son.The supply closet on the fourth floor was small and smelled like bleach and rubber gloves. She closed the door and pressed her back against a shelf of folded linens and let it come, the sobs that had been building behind her ribs since the moment she'd seen the empty bed in Room Seven. Silent, body-shaking sobs, because she had learned years ago how to cry without sound, how to grieve in a closet, in a car, in a bathroom with the fan running.She cried for Ethan's small body shuddering under sedation. For the version of herself who had believed, even a little, even against her own better judgment, that three days of presence meant something had changed. For the woman she had been at twenty-three, who thought patience was a kind of love you could bank, accumulate, eventually cash in for the life she wanted.T

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 5: THE FIRST TEST

    For three days, Adrian had been a different man. He told himself that meant something. He was about to find out it didn't.He knew the nurses by name. He knew the medication schedule, the beta-blocker at eight and two, the second drug whose name he had written on his hand until he memorized it. He

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 4: THE DIAGNOSIS

    The consent forms required two signatures. Sophia signed first. Her hand didn't shake, She had promised herself it wouldn't.Dr. Reyes was the pediatric cardiac surgeon. forties, deliberate, with the particular economy of movement that came from spending decades in operating rooms. She had arrived

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 3: OLIVIA'S HOLD

    Adrian didn't follow Sophia because Olivia was hyperventilating. He told himself that was a reason. It wasn't until midnight that he understood it was an excuse.The office door closed and Olivia came apart.It happened fast, the way it always happened fast, like a pressure valve releasing. Her br

  • THE GOODBYE HE MISSED    CHAPTER 2: THE WAITING ROOM

    The emergency room smelled like antiseptic and fear, and Sophia knew she was going to be alone for all of it. She pushed through the entrance doors at 9:44 PM. Friday night at St. Michael's ER looked like a war zone, a man with his hand wrapped in a dish towel, two children running circuits aroun

Más capítulos
Explora y lee buenas novelas gratis
Acceso gratuito a una gran cantidad de buenas novelas en la app GoodNovel. Descarga los libros que te gusten y léelos donde y cuando quieras.
Lee libros gratis en la app
ESCANEA EL CÓDIGO PARA LEER EN LA APP
DMCA.com Protection Status