The divorce was final six months later. Thomas did not fight it. I got the apartment, a fair share of the investments, and legal protection over what was mine. That night I came home to flowers from Emily, Ryan, and the grandchildren. The card said, “For the bravest woman in our family.” And I cried again, but from something cleaner this time.
A year after the morning with the chocolates, I was no longer the same woman. Thomas’s old study had become my studio. My walls were covered with photographs and paintings. I made coffee only for myself and discovered that such a small act could feel like freedom.
Then I met Robert at a photography show in Santa Barbara. He was a retired history professor, widowed, with the kind of presence that does not crowd you—it accompanies you. We talked about photographs, then books, then music, then life. Nothing dramatic happened. We simply drifted, calmly and at our age honestly, into each other’s company. He never treated me like a broken woman or a tragic heroine. He treated me like Margaret. Curious. Whole. Worth knowing.
When he kissed me for the first time after a concert in the rain, I laughed.
“What?” he asked.