MasukHelena shook her hand.
That was the thing she would think about later. Lying in the dark. Replaying it. Of all the things she could have done in that moment, she shook Camila Calloway’s hand like they were meeting at a networking event and everything was perfectly fine.
“Helena.” She said her own name back like a confirmation. Kept her voice even. Kept her face even. Kept everything even. “Nice to meet you.”
Camila’s hand was warm. Firm handshake. The kind that said she’d introduced herself to a lot of important people and knew exactly how to do it. She held the shake one second longer than necessary and then let go.
“I’ve been hoping we’d run into each other,” Camila said. “Damian talks about you.”
Helena looked at her husband.
Damian had stood up from the table. He was doing that thing where his face was very still and very careful, which on another day she might have mistaken for calm. She knew better now. That stillness was him calculating. Figuring out what this moment needed from him.
“Small city,” Helena said pleasantly.
“Isn’t it?” Camila smiled. Perfectly warm. Perfectly at ease. She gestured at the table behind her. “We were just finishing up. Would you and your friend like to join us? There’s room.”
The audacity of it landed somewhere in Helena’s chest and just sat there.
“We couldn’t impose,” Helena said.
“Not at all, we…”
“Helena.” Damian’s voice was quiet. Direct. Cutting through Camila’s sentence in a way that made Camila glance at him briefly. “I didn’t know you were going to be downtown today.”
“Last-minute thing.” She smiled at him. The same smile she’d given him last night in the kitchen. The one that looked exactly like a real one. “Don’t let me interrupt. I was just leaving.”
“Helena…”
“It was lovely to meet you, Camila.” She turned back to the woman beside her husband and looked at her clearly and steadily for exactly two seconds. “Enjoy your lunch.”
Then she walked out.
The door swung shut behind her. The afternoon air hit her face and she kept walking, one foot then the other, down the sidewalk away from the restaurant until she reached the corner and stopped.
Her hands were shaking.
She looked at them like they belonged to someone else. Steady all morning. Steady through the photo and the bedroom and Cassidy’s coffee and the bread basket and three tables away and Damian’s hand on Camila’s hand.
Shaking now. At a street corner two blocks from a restaurant because she’d just shaken the hand of the woman her husband was going to leave her for and said nice to meet you.
Her phone buzzed.
Cassidy. I’m right behind you. Don’t move.
Thirty seconds later Cassidy came around the corner at a pace that was almost running and wasn’t quite. She stopped in front of Helena and looked at her face and didn’t say anything for a moment.
Then she said. “You shook her hand.”
“I know.”
“You said nice to meet you.”
“Cassidy.”
“I’m not judging you I’m just…” She exhaled. Looked up at the sky briefly. Looked back. “Are you okay?”
“No,” Helena said simply. The way you say a true thing when you’re too tired to dress it up. “I’m really not.”
Cassidy put both arms around her right there on the corner and Helena stood inside that and breathed and did not cry. She was very deliberate about not crying. Not here. Not yet.
“I saw his face,” Helena said into Cassidy’s shoulder. “When he saw me walk in. He wasn’t guilty, Cass. He was scared. There’s a difference.”
Cassidy was quiet.
“Guilty means he knows he’s doing something wrong.” Helena pulled back. Looked at her sister. “Scared means he’s not ready to deal with it yet. He hasn’t decided anything yet. But he’s thinking about it.” She stopped. “He’s been thinking about it for weeks.”
“You don’t know that.”
“I know my husband.”
Cassidy looked at her for a long moment. “What do you want to do?”
Helena thought about the rosemary chicken. About learning to make it without lemon because he’d mentioned once, casually, the way he mentioned most things, that the lemon was too sharp. She thought about looking up when his key hit the door. About the pause before I’m happy. About two years of a marriage she had believed in it completely.
“I want to go home,” she said. “And I want you to find out everything.”
-
She was twenty-two when she met Damian Graves.
She hadn’t been looking for anyone. She’d been in her third year at Velmont University with a double major that was eating her alive and a part-time job at a coffee shop on Mercer Street and absolutely no time or interest in anything that wasn’t directly related to surviving the semester.
He’d come in on a Tuesday. Ordered black coffee. Sat at the corner table with his laptop and worked for three hours without looking up.
He came back on Wednesday. Same order. Same table.
Thursday he looked up when she set his coffee down and said. “You remembered.”
She’d made it before he ordered. She hadn’t realized she’d done it until he said something.
“You come in at the same time every day and order the same thing,” she said. “It’s not complicated.”
He looked at her for a moment. “Most people don’t notice.”
“I notice everything,” she said. And went back to the counter.
He left a note with the tip on Thursday. Just a number. No name.
She thought about not texting it. She thought about it for four days and then texted it because she was twenty-two and he had kind eyes and she had learned very early in her life that the things you didn’t do had a way of sitting with you longer than the things you did.
They dated for a year before he told her he loved her. He wasn’t someone who said things before he meant them. That was the thing she’d loved most. The certainty of everything he said was because he only said things he was sure of.
She’d believed that certainty completely.
She’d built a marriage on it.
Helena was standing in her kitchen making dinner again when she heard the front door. She looked up automatically. She always looked up.
Damian walked in and stopped when he saw her face.
Not what she was showing him. What was underneath it? He’d always been able to do that. See the thing she was holding just below the surface. It was one of the things she’d loved about him once and it felt unbearable now.
“Helena.” He set his bag down slowly.
“Dinner’s almost ready.” She turned back to the stove.
“We should talk about today.”
“There’s nothing to talk about.” She kept her voice light. Kept the spoon moving. “I met a colleague of yours. It was fine.”
“She’s not a colleague.”
The spoon stopped.
The kitchen was very quiet.
Helena put the spoon down carefully. Turned around. Looked at her husband standing in his coat by the kitchen door with his bag at his feet and his face doing that careful still thing.
“Then what is she,” Helena said.
Damian looked at her.
He opened his mouth.
And then his phone rang.
They both looked at it. At the screen lighting up in his coat pocket. At the name on it that Helena couldn’t see from here but that Damian’s eyes went to with an expression she felt like a physical thing.
He looked back at her.
“Don’t,” Helena said quietly.
He reached into his pocket.
“Damian.” Her voice was very still. “Do not answer that phone.”
He looked at her for one long moment.
Then he silenced it and put it back in his pocket.
“She’s someone I knew before,” he said. “Before us. We’ve been… reconnecting. I should have told you.”
Helena looked at her husband. At the careful words. At the eyes that were present now in the way they hadn’t been in weeks. At the word reconnecting sitting between them doing a very specific kind of work.
“Reconnecting,” she said.
“It’s not—”
“Damian.” She picked the spoon back up. Turned back to the stove because she did not want to look at him right now. “Go wash up. Dinner is in ten minutes.”
“Helena we need to….”
“Ten minutes,” she said.
He was quiet for a moment.
Then she heard him pick up his bag. Heard his footsteps move toward the stairs.
She stood at the stove and stirred something that didn’t need stirring and thought about a girl of twenty-two who noticed a man’s coffee order and texted a number after four days because she’d learned that the things you didn’t do sat with you longer.
She thought about what she was doing right now.
And she thought about what she was going to have to do next.
Her phone was on the counter beside her. She picked it up and typed a message to Cassidy.
He almost told me tonight. He got a phone call and stopped.
Cassidy’s reply came in thirty seconds.
Who called him?
Helena looked at the message. Then she typed back three letters that she already knew the answer to.
Who do you think?
She put the phone face down on the counter.
Upstairs she could hear Damian moving around. The sound of the shower turning on. The ordinary sounds of a husband ending his day while his wife stood downstairs holding a story together that was already starting to come apart at the edges.
The water ran.
The kitchen filled with the smell of food she’d made with her hands for a man who had someone calling his phone at dinner time.
And Helena stood in the middle of it and made a decision so quiet she barely heard it herself.
She was not going to fall apart.
Not yet.
Not until she knew everything.
And then God help them both.
The lawyer's office was on the fourteenth floor of a building downtown that looked like it had been designed to make people feel small.Helena arrived five minutes early. She sat in the waiting area with her coat in her lap and her back straight and her hands folded and she looked at the city through the floor to ceiling window and thought about nothing in particular. That was something she had learned in the last few days. How to think about nothing. It was harder than it sounded but she was getting better at it.Damian arrived two minutes later.He saw her the moment he walked in. She watched him adjust. Watched him decide what his face was going to do. He chose neutral. She respected that."Helena," he said."Damian," she said.They sat on opposite sides of the waiting area until the lawyer called them in.The room was the kind of quiet that had carpet and heavy furniture and no windows. The lawyer said things. Helena listened and said yes in the right places and kept her hands fol
He came back on a Thursday.Helena heard his key in the door at seven-fifteen and looked up the way she always looked up. Some habits did not care about context. She was in the kitchen making tea, not dinner. She had stopped making dinner three days ago. She had not announced this. She had just stopped.Damian came in and set his bag down and stood in the hallway looking at her.She looked back."Do you want tea?" she asked."No," he said. "Thank you."She turned back to the kettle. She heard him take off his jacket. Heard the familiar sound of it landing on the chair by the door. Two years of that sound. She knew it the way you knew the sounds of a life you had built around a person without realizing you were doing it."Helena.""I know," she said."I haven't said anything yet.""I know what you came home to say, Damian." She poured the water. Watched the tea steep. "I've known for three days."The kitchen was quiet."I'm sorry," he said."Don't." She turned around. Looked at her hus
Cassidy went silent for exactly one second.Then she said a word. One word. The kind that came from a place so deep and so furious that Helena had never once heard it leave her sister's mouth in thirty years. It landed in Helena's ear and somehow that single word, more than the phone call and the rooftop photo and the hand across the restaurant table, was the thing that finally made Helena's eyes sting."I know," Helena said quietly."She went into his phone," Cassidy said. Her voice had gone to that flat, dangerous place. "She went into your husband's phone, found your number and called you. At work. To tell you about their history.""Yes.""And she said it like she was doing you a favor.""Yes."A long pause. Helena could hear Cassidy breathing on the other end."What are you going to do?" Cassidy asked."I'm going home," Helena said. "And I'm going to talk to my husband.""Helena...""Not to fall apart. Not to beg." Her voice was very steady. "I'm going to look him in the face and
Cassidy called at seven the next morning.Helena was already awake. She’d been awake since four, lying on her side of the bed listening to Damian breathe and thinking about the word *reconnecting* and what it was doing in her marriage.She picked up before the second ring. “Talk.”“Good morning to you too.” Cassidy’s voice was alert in the way of someone who had also not slept particularly well. “I found things.”Helena sat up slowly. Damian shifted beside her. She slid out of bed and walked to the bathroom, closing the door quietly behind her.“How much things,” she said.“Enough.” A pause. “You sure you want to do this right now? Before coffee?”“Cassidy.”“Okay. Okay.” The sound of paper. Or maybe a keyboard. “Camila Calloway. Thirty one years old. Finance director at Vantage Group downtown. Moved back to Velmont eight weeks ago from New York where she worked at a firm called Aldridge Capital for four years.” Another pause. “Before New York she was here. In Velmont. For three years
Helena shook her hand.That was the thing she would think about later. Lying in the dark. Replaying it. Of all the things she could have done in that moment, she shook Camila Calloway’s hand like they were meeting at a networking event and everything was perfectly fine.“Helena.” She said her own name back like a confirmation. Kept her voice even. Kept her face even. Kept everything even. “Nice to meet you.”Camila’s hand was warm. Firm handshake. The kind that said she’d introduced herself to a lot of important people and knew exactly how to do it. She held the shake one second longer than necessary and then let go.“I’ve been hoping we’d run into each other,” Camila said. “Damian talks about you.”Helena looked at her husband.Damian had stood up from the table. He was doing that thing where his face was very still and very careful, which on another day she might have mistaken for calm. She knew better now. That stillness was him calculating. Figuring out what this moment needed fro
Cassidy was already at the kitchen table when Helena came downstairs, two coffees placedwith the precision of a woman who had done this before. Who had sat at this table before inexactly this kind of morning.She looked up when Helena walked in.She didn't say anything right away. Just looked at her sister the way only Cassidy could, likeshe was taking inventory of every single thing Helena was holding together and calculatingwhat was about to fall."Sit down," Cassidy said.Helena sat.Cassidy pushed one of the coffees across the table. "Talk to me. All of it. From the beginning.""I already told you on the phone.""You told me about a photo. I want to know about before the photo." Cassidy wrapped bothhands around her own cup. "How long has something felt off?"Helena looked at her coffee."Three weeks," she said. "Maybe four.""What kind of off?""Just..." She stopped. Tried to find the right word and kept finding the wrong ones. "Quiet. Hegot quiet in a different way. Damian i







