Daniel stood in the empty kitchen holding the envelope, reading it again as if repetition could undo what it said. Melissa moved behind him, her voice rising with every word she scanned, but the sound felt useless in a house that no longer responded to them. “She can’t do this,” she kept insisting, but Daniel didn’t answer. His eyes stayed fixed on the paper, on my signature, on the finality of it. The silence in the house felt heavier than any argument they could make.
He finally lowered the letter.
“She already did,” he said quietly.
Melissa tried to grab the documents from him, flipping through pages with shaking hands, her confidence breaking into frustration. “There has to be a mistake,” she said, but her voice no longer carried certainty. Daniel looked around the stripped rooms—the missing photos, the empty shelves, the absence where a life used to be. “There isn’t,” he said. “It’s done.” And for the first time, he understood that the future they had planned wasn’t stolen—it was never theirs to take.
Outside, I watched from the truck as the realization settled fully into them. Not anger. Not panic. Something slower. Heavier. Daniel leaned against the counter, staring at nothing, while Melissa kept talking into a space that no longer belonged to her. The house didn’t feel empty—it felt finished. And for the first time in a long time, I didn’t feel like I was waiting to be chosen.
I started the engine and drove away before either of them looked out the window.