ANMELDENChapter 4
ELENA
The nurse appeared at my elbow.
"Do you have someone to take you home?" she asked.
"Yes," I said.
I did not.
I picked up my bag carefully and walked out.
The taxi ride home was longer than the one to the hospital.
I sat with my bandaged hand in my lap and watched the cars go by me, as I tried to identify the feeling that I was experiencing, it was not anger or sadness per day, but something more quieter than that, disappointment.
He had gone to her.
I had asked him not to, but then he had gone. To a hand that the nurse had already said was fine.
I leaned my head against the cool glass of the window and thought about what that meant, and I remember his words from before.
There will be no children in this marriage, Elena.
He had said it so simply. Like it was a business clause. Like I had asked about a policy and he had quoted me the company line.
I used to tell myself that was just how Adrian communicated.
But sitting in that hospital watching him bend over Vivian's hand with more tenderness than he had ever once turned toward me, I thought something I had been avoiding for a long time.
Maybe he simply didn't want children with me.
Maybe it was not about children at all. Maybe it was about who I was to him and who she was to him and how those had never been the same thing, no matter how hard I tried to make it otherwise.
I pressed my bandaged hand gently against my stomach.
I wanted a child. I had always wanted one. A family, a home, a person who would not leave. I had wanted that since I was small. If Adrian would not give me that, then perhaps it was time to stop waiting for him to want to.
Perhaps it was time to be the one who ended it.
But fate had other plans.
The pregnancy test sat on the bathroom counter. I stared at the two pink lines, unable to believe my eyes.
I was pregnant.
A month ago, I'd forgotten to take my pill. Adrian had come to me that night, and after three years of being careful, I was finally carrying his child.
I had to tell him. Whatever was happening between us, he deserved to know.
---
That evening he told me we were going to his mother's house for dinner.
I knew Vivian would be there before I even walked through the door. I am not sure how I knew. But I had a feeling she was there because she was not the kind of person to stay away from a stage where she could shine, as usual,
She was there. Standing near the fireplace in a dress the color of dark wine, laughing at something Adrian's mother was saying. Adrian's mother, who never accepted me as her daughter in law, was laughing back.
She did not look at me when I walked in, like I was not worthy enough to be acknowledged. I pretended not to notice and went to the dining hall.
Dinner was formal and tense, I tried to focus on eating a little bit to fill my stomach up and leave before my next bout of nausea while their conversation flew by my head.
Adrian mentioned the debut. Vivian's small-scale tour, first performances, the business side of things finally beginning to settle into something solid. He said it had gone well. He said the foundation was in place now.
I set down my fork. He had been with her constantly for a month. I had known it was work. I had told myself every day that I knew it was work. But listening to him, talk about the attention he had paid to her and not to me was really starting to hurt.
Two bites into the next course my stomach turned over without warning. I pressed my lips together hard.
"Elena." Adrian's mother's voice, sharp and observant. "You look pale. Are you feeling unwell?"
"I'm fine," I said. "The food is—"
"Are you pregnant?"
The table went quiet.
My mouth opened. I could feel Vivian's gaze from across the table, still and attentive.
"That is not possible," Adrian said.
He said it simply. Automatically. Without looking at me first.
"We have always been careful," he continued, his voice even. "It is not something we need to consider."
He said it bluntly and harshly, shutting down any hopes of it, as I watched Vivian's mouth turn up in a pleased smirk.
I picked up my glass and drank slowly and kept my face very still.
Back at home that night, I sat in the bedroom, thinking about Adrian's words very and over as I thought about my options, Adrian did not want children with me, he will force me for an abortion once he finds out.
There was nothing left in this marriage to hold onto
I was going to ask him for a divorce. I was going to be the one to say it first, cut him loose and clean and leave immediately.
He came in behind me and I heard him set his watch on the dresser, the small familiar sound of it, and I took a breath.
"Elena."
I looked up.
He was standing with his back to the dresser, his jacket gone, his sleeves rolled to the elbows. He looked tired. He also looked like a man who had made a decision.
"I think we should talk about ending the marriage," he said. "Formally. The contract terms are clear. I would like to begin the process."
Chapter 27ARIAI was coming out of the small grocery store two streets from the hotel with Eli's hand in mine and a paper bag of fruit balanced against my hip when I saw her standing by the entrance.Ava.She was not dressed for coincidence. She was standing too still, too deliberately positioned near the door, the kind of waiting that told you a person had been waiting specifically for you and not for anything else."Aria Vale," she said, and her voice had none of the warmth I had seen in the park that day with Julian. "Or should I say Aria. I don't actually know what to call you.""Excuse me?" I said, my grip on Eli's hand tightening slightly without my deciding to do it."I think we should talk," she said, stepping closer. "Woman to woman."Eli looked up at her, then at me, his small face doing the thing it did when he sensed adults behaving strangely around him."Mum, who's this?""Nobody, sweetheart," I said. "Go stand by the window for a second, okay? Look at the puppies in the
Chapter 26JULIAN POVSomething had shifted in her and I did not know what.She had been quiet since the day I ran into Ava in the park, quiet in a specific way that I had learned to recognize over five years, the kind of quiet that meant she was holding something and deciding whether to hand it to me or keep carrying it herself.I gave her the space I usually gave her. That had always worked before. Aria needed time to arrange her own thoughts before she could speak them, and pushing only made the process longer, not shorter.But three more days passed and the quiet did not lift.I found her in the dressing room after the Thursday performance, sitting in front of the mirror with her violin still in her lap, not changing yet, staring at her own reflection like she was trying to find an answer in it."Hey," I said, closing the door behind me. "You played beautifully tonight.""Thank you," she said, but it came out distant.I sat in the chair beside her."Aria. Talk to me."She was quie
Chapter 25ARIAI told myself it was nothing for three days.It was a reasonable thing to tell myself. Julian had a life before me, a full life, with relationships and history that had nothing to do with the woman he found half-conscious and nameless in a hospital bed. It would have been strange if he didn't. I had no claim on the years before I existed to him as anyone at all.But the stone stayed where it was, and on the fourth day, while Julian was at a meeting with the venue about the final performance logistics and Eli was occupied with his tablet under the stage manager's supervision, I found myself in our hotel room going through a box of his things.I was not looking for anything specific. I told myself that too.The box had come with us from city to city for the length of the tour, a small archive box of business files and old photographs Julian kept for sentimental reasons, things he sometimes pulled out to show Eli, university photos, early agency photos, the small artifact
Chapter 24JULIANI had Eli's hand in mine and a bag of his favourite crackers from the kiosk in the other when I heard my name called from across the path."Julian? Julian Hale?"I turned. A woman was walking toward us quickly, her face breaking into the kind of surprised smile reserved for people you have not seen in years and did not expect to see again.Ava.It took me a second to place her fully, the years had changed her hair, her style, but the face underneath all of it was the same. We had dated for almost a year, a long time ago, before any of this, before Elena, before any of what my life had become."I don't believe it," she said, stopping in front of us, eyes moving from me to Eli and back. "It's actually you.""Ava." I said her name carefully, the surprise genuine. "It's been a long time.""Years," she agreed, laughing a little. "You look exactly the same. Older, but the same." Her eyes dropped to Eli. "And who is this?""This is Eli," I said. "A friend's son."Eli looked
Chapter 23Vivian had said as much. My mother had said something similar, in the way my mother said things, with less gentleness and more specific instruction about what I ought to do instead.I picked up my phone and put it down again.Julian had threatened to call the police and he had meant it and he had the standing to follow through. I had grabbed Elena's wrist at a public event and it was still circulating online and the narrative was not flattering. Another incident would move from gossip to something with legal weight.I needed to be rational.I was going to be rational.Being rational lasted until Saturday afternoon.I had gone to the park near my building because it was a thing my doctor had suggested in a way that implied I was not managing stress adequately, and I was trying to demonstrate to myself that I could follow reasonable advice.I had been walking for fifteen minutes when I heard him."If you go that way, the ducks get angry. I found that out already."I stopped.
Chapter 22ARIAThe Monday reception was where it happened.I had not wanted to attend and Julian had said it was professionally important and I had agreed and regretted agreeing for the full hour before we arrived. It was a smaller gathering, perhaps thirty people, the kind of event where distance was not available as a strategy.Adrian found me near the windows.He was different that evening. Something slightly less controlled about the edges of him. He had come from somewhere else before this, I thought, some other engagement, and whatever composure management he usually applied had worn thin.He did not start with pleasantries."I want to ask you something," he said."You can ask," I said. "I reserve the right not to answer."Something almost like humor moved across his face. Brief and then gone."Before Elena disappeared," he said, keeping his voice low, "she was injured. Her hand." He looked at my hands where they rested around my glass. "A burn. The back of her right hand. It w







