Something in that sentence dragged your attention sideways.
Facts.
You looked at his face more closely now, past the shock and humiliation. There was grief there. Real grief. Not clean enough to make him innocent, but not fake either. He wasn’t crowing. Wasn’t smug. Wasn’t using your son as leverage. He looked like a man who had stepped into a nightmare and could not believe the shape it had taken.
That made everything worse.
“Leave,” you repeated, quieter this time.
He nodded.
At the bedroom door he paused. “Ellie… I’m sorry for last night only because of this morning. Not because it happened.”
You shut your eyes.
“Please don’t make this harder.”
A long silence stretched between you.
Then he said, “For what it’s worth, you didn’t do anything wrong.”
And then he left.
The front door closed softly. No slam. No drama. Just a terrible little click that seemed to echo through every room in the house.
You stood in the center of your bedroom for several minutes, still holding the photo frame, until your arm began to ache. Then you sat on the edge of the bed and stared at the wall while the morning widened around you.
At first, you thought you might vomit.
Then you thought you might faint.
Then nothing happened at all, and that was somehow the strangest part. The world did not stop. Cars passed outside. Somewhere in the neighborhood, a lawn mower started. A dog barked. Life continued with its usual offensive indifference while inside your chest, an entire architecture had collapsed.
Around noon, your phone rang.
Michael.
You stared at his name until it stopped. Then started again.
This time you answered.
“Mom?” His voice sounded normal. Distractingly normal. “Hey. Sorry I missed your birthday yesterday. Things were crazy here.”
Crazy.