Marcus was waiting in the car.

He took one look at my face and opened his arms before I had even fully shut the door behind me. I folded into him there in the front seat, the navy-blue box wedged awkwardly between us, and let the adrenaline drain out of my muscles in waves.

“How do you feel?” he asked after a while.

I considered it.

“Free,” I said.

He smiled into my hair. “Good answer.”

My phone had already begun lighting up by then.

Calls.
Texts.
Voicemails piling on top of each other so fast the screen kept refreshing before I could read them all.

Forty-seven missed calls by the time we got home. Twelve from Richard. Eight from Derek. More from numbers I didn’t know. Guests, no doubt. Curious witnesses. Social opportunists. Maybe one or two genuinely concerned people who had stood in that room and recognized cruelty in time to be ashamed of not interrupting it sooner.

My mother’s texts came first and fastest.

Please call me.
Thea, I’m sorry.
You misunderstood.
We need to talk.
Please don’t do this.
I didn’t mean it.
You can’t cut me off like this.
Please.

Marcus set his keys in the bowl by the door and looked at the screen lighting up again and again.

“You going to answer?”

“Not tonight.”