There are humiliations so complete they leave you strangely calm. I walked to the bedroom with that empty suitcase and began pulling clothes from drawers with trembling hands. A sweater, jeans, underwear, my toothbrush, my phone charger. My life shrank quickly when measured by what I could carry.

I kept waiting for him to come after me and say he was angry, that he needed space, that we would talk in the morning. Instead, I heard the television come on in the living room. He was already settling into the house as if I were gone.

When I opened the top drawer of my dresser, my fingers brushed against something cold and flat beneath an old scarf. I froze. It was the black metal card my father had given me a week before he died.

I had not looked at it in months. Even now, in the dim bedroom light, it looked strange—heavier than any ordinary card, plain except for a small engraved crest: an eagle circling a shield. There was no bank name on the front, no familiar logo, nothing that made it make sense.