He Skipped Her Grandmother’s Funeral, Then The Lease Turned On Him-eirian

The apartment was quiet when Emma unlocked the door, but not the kind of quiet that feels like rest.

It was the kind of quiet that collects around a person who has been alone for too long.

The living room still carried the shape of Ryan’s last night.

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A controller on the beanbag.

A hoodie over the chair.

A cold pizza box on the coffee table.

The balcony door cracked open just enough for the smell of smoke to leak back inside.

Emma stood in the doorway with her overnight bag on her shoulder and her funeral dress folded over one arm.

For three days, she had been at her parents’ house, sleeping in the room she had outgrown years ago.

Her mother had left tea outside the door.

Her father had warmed up soup and pretended not to hear her crying in the shower.

Nobody pushed her.

Nobody told her she was being dramatic.

Nobody asked why a grown woman needed that much silence after burying her grandmother.

That alone had nearly broken her.

Because when she compared those three days to the apartment she shared with Ryan, the truth became too obvious to argue with.

She felt more cared for in her old childhood room than she did in the home she had signed a lease to build with the man she loved.

Ryan was in the living room when she came in.

He had a headset around his neck and a video paused on the screen.

He looked over his shoulder like she had interrupted something, then gave her a careful smile.

“Hey,” he said.

Emma waited for more.

She waited for him to ask how her mother was holding up.

She waited for him to ask if the funeral flowers had arrived.

She waited for him to say he was sorry he had not been there.

He glanced back at the screen.

“Are you still mad?”

That was the sentence that ended the part of her still negotiating.

Not because it was the worst thing he had ever said.

It was not.

The worst things had been smaller, repeated so often they had started to feel normal.

Going to bed alone while his keyboard clicked through the wall.

Eating dinner by herself while he smoked on the balcony.

Watching him get sick before every event with her family, then magically recover for his own friends.

Asking for one evening together and being told he was afraid he would miss something online.

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