I Had a 104-Degree Fever. He Asked Where Dinner Was.-solsu07

The doorbell rang at 10:02 a.m., and the sound moved through the house like a second heartbeat.

Mark was still holding the divorce papers.

Donna was still standing in the kitchen in her lavender robe, one hand braced against the counter as if outrage itself needed support.

I was sitting at the table in an old college sweatshirt, feverish and exhausted, but calmer than I had been in months.

Mark looked from me to the front door and back again.

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“Emily,” he said, his voice thinner now, “what did you do?”

I stood up slowly. My legs felt weak, but the weakness no longer frightened me.

“I called people who understand paperwork,” I said.

“You should try it sometime.”

When I opened the door, the locksmith stood there with a metal case in one hand.

Beside him was Naomi Reed, my attorney, crisp in a navy blazer despite the August heat, carrying a leather portfolio.

She gave me one quick look, took in the red mark on my cheek, and her whole face sharpened.

Behind them, parked at the curb, sat Naomi’s silver sedan.

No sheriff. Not yet.

I had called the non-emergency line at dawn to ask what my options were if Mark refused to leave a house that was legally mine.

The deputy who called me back had been matter-of-fact in a way I loved immediately.

If there had been violence, he told me, I could request a civil standby once my lawyer advised the next step.

The simplicity of that conversation had steadied me more than anything else all morning.

Facts help.

Facts do not flinch.

Naomi stepped inside first. “Good morning,” she said to no one in particular.

“Emily, do you want me to proceed?”

I nodded.

Mark stood up so fast his chair scraped the tile.

“Proceed with what?”

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