The neighborhood I had helped her buy into four years ago.

I got into my car, shut the door, and sat there with both hands on the steering wheel, gripping it so hard my knuckles went pale.

Part of me wanted to scream so loudly the windows shook. Another part wanted to cry until my lungs emptied. Instead, I just sat there shaking, replaying the last hour in my mind like a cruel highlight reel—Aiden’s solemn face, the fork flying, the laughter that followed.

I drove home on autopilot, streetlights blurring, my shoulder throbbing in time with my heartbeat.

It was 10:34 p.m. when I stepped into my apartment.

My place was smaller than Jessica’s in every measurable way. No chandelier. No “wing.” No professional beach portraits. Just a modest living room with a mismatched sofa, an old bookshelf, and a ceramic dish by the door where I dropped my keys. A dish I’d bought at a flea market years ago because I liked how imperfect it was.

Tonight, it felt like sanctuary.

I kicked off my shoes, hung up my coat, and exhaled for the first time since the fork hit me.

My phone buzzed before I could even sit down.

Jessica.

Seriously, you left because of a joke? Aiden’s seven. He doesn’t know better.