He Asked For Freedom, Then His Own Family Chose Me At Dinner-olive

The ring box did not open gently.

It slid across the white tablecloth and stopped beside my plate, crooked and accusing, like I was supposed to be grateful it had arrived at all.

Lorcan sat across from me in the restaurant where I had booked our fifth-anniversary dinner.

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He wore the watch I bought him.

He wore the belt I bought him.

He tapped one polished shoe under the table while the waiter poured the wine I had already paid for with the card he liked to call “ours” whenever the bill came.

“I am down to get married,” he said, as if he were negotiating a gym membership.

Then he leaned back and told me he needed freedom.

There were too many beautiful women in the world, he said.

He needed to explore.

He needed experiences before he died.

He was thirty-one.

I looked at the tiny velvet box, then at the man who had spent five years letting me make him feel like a prize.

I had paid most of our rent while he was “getting himself together.”

I had bought groceries while he researched careers he never started.

I had praised him through failures he called bad luck.

I had softened every truth until it could not bruise him.

That was my part in it.

Love had become a full-time job, and I was the only employee.

So when he expected tears, I gave him a smile.

“You are absolutely right,” I said.

His face brightened so fast it almost made me laugh.

“See?” he said. “This is why I love you. You get it.”

He reached for my hand while his eyes followed another woman walking past the booth.

I let him squeeze my fingers.

I let him think he had won.

Within a week, Lorcan became a man auditioning for a life he could not afford.

He bought new cologne in installments.

He sat beside me on the couch swiping through dating profiles and showing me photos like I was his coach.

“This one wants drinks Thursday,” he said once.

Then he added, “You should try too, but you might be too shy for this.”

I folded a towel and nodded.

He heard agreement.

I heard permission.

Two weeks later, his mother texted about the family barbecue.

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