He did it in the bedroom we had shared for ten years, moving with brisk, efficient motions while I stood in the doorway feeling like a ghost trapped in somebody else’s house. He took dress shirts, shoes, a shaving kit, his laptop chargers, the leather duffel his brother had given him one Christmas, and the navy sweater Lily had once called his “hug sweater” because she liked to bury her face in it when he came home.
He did not take the framed wedding photo from the dresser. He did not take the book of baby pictures. He did not take the ceramic handprint ornament Lily made in kindergarten that still hung from the mirror over the chest of drawers.
That hurt more than if he had smashed them.
“Where are you staying?” I asked.
He zipped the larger suitcase. “With a friend.”
“What friend?”
He looked at me then, tired and cold. “Does it matter?”
It mattered. That was the whole unbearable point. It mattered because every answer he refused became a new humiliation I had to carry by myself. It mattered because our daughter was in the next room building a blanket fort and humming to herself, trusting the architecture of this house because she did not yet know it was being dismantled around her.