The wind kept moving, but nobody else did.
Maris had just said it in the same tone someone might use to confirm a dinner reservation.
Before you and Daniel ended things.

We thought you knew.
The city lights behind her looked smeared, as if rain had been dragged across the skyline by a sleeve. My fingers were still wrapped around the stem of the champagne glass. Cold water slid over my palm and gathered at my wrist. Daniel finally lifted his head, but not high enough to meet my eyes.
His mouth opened.
Nothing came out.
A laugh broke somewhere behind me and died halfway through, choked off by the silence that had spread across the terrace. Someone near the bar shifted their weight. A chair leg scraped stone.
Maris picked up her glass again.
That was the part that steadied me.
Not her words. Not Daniel’s face. The glass.
The way she had already moved on inside her own body, already decided this scene belonged to me alone.
I set my champagne down before I broke it.
Then I looked at Daniel.
— Tell them.
His eyes snapped to mine.
A pulse beat once in his throat.
— Elena—
— Tell them which date came first.
The projector behind us kept cycling through slides from the quarter-end awards. Our team’s revenue numbers flashed across the portable screen in clean blue bars. $842,000. $1.1 million. Applause from an hour earlier trapped inside a machine that no one had bothered to turn off.
Daniel dragged a hand over his mouth.
Maris smiled without showing teeth.
— This isn’t the place.
— You seemed comfortable with the place a minute ago.
That landed. A few heads turned between us like spectators at a tennis match. Our operations lead, Noor, had stopped mid-bite with a forkful of salmon hanging in the air. Owen from legal stood near the heaters with both hands around a whiskey glass, eyes narrowed.
Daniel looked at Maris.
She didn’t look back.
That was when he understood he was standing there alone.
At 9:14 p.m., with the string lights shaking overhead and the scent of butter and smoke turning sour in the cold, he took one step away from her.
Not much.
Just enough.
I saw it. So did everyone else.
Maris’s chin shifted a fraction.
— Daniel, tell them,
I said again.
He let out a breath through his nose.
— It started in February.
The numbers clicked into place so fast they almost made a sound. He had moved out in March. The Friday-night receipt in his jacket. The perfume on his scarf. The silence when I asked why he kept turning his phone facedown.
February.
The month we had eaten takeout on my kitchen floor because the table I ordered for $389.20 still hadn’t arrived. The month he stood in my bathroom doorway, damp from the shower, and asked if we should finally book the Lisbon trip. The month he kissed the side of my neck while I was packing his lunch and told me not to forget the extra chili crisp because the cafeteria food was bland.
February.
Maris folded one arm across her waist.
That was the first crack.
No one said anything. That was worse. No gasps. No shouting. Just twenty pairs of eyes, sharpened.
I could hear the patio heater clicking. The ice bucket near the bar had melted enough that cubes were floating in a silver pool.
Then Noor set down her plate.
— You two were seeing each other while Elena was still with him?
Maris turned to her with a small, controlled smile.
— I don’t think my personal life belongs in a work setting.
Owen gave a short laugh into his glass.
— You brought it into a work setting when you brought him here.
That was crack number two.
Maris glanced at Daniel. He stared at the stone floor.
Someone’s phone buzzed against a table. Nobody reached for it.
I had imagined this moment in smaller ways. A slammed door. A hissed argument in a hallway. A message typed at 1:03 a.m. and deleted before sending. What stood in front of me was uglier and more useful. Two people who had relied on my silence, exposed not by a speech but by their own timing.
So I kept my voice even.
— How long did everyone know?
A few people looked offended on instinct, the way innocent people do when a room suddenly feels dirty.
Noor spoke first.
— We didn’t.
Owen shook his head.
— I saw them leave together once after the Henderson pitch. Thought maybe it was a client thing.
The Henderson pitch.
I remembered that night. Daniel had texted at 11:26 p.m.
Still with my brother. Bad signal.
I could see the message in my head, the little delivered checkmark, the blue glow of my phone on the bedroom ceiling.
Maris pressed her thumb to the side of her glass.
— Elena, this is enough.
I looked at her fully then. Her lipstick was still perfect. Her earrings caught the light each time the wind moved her hair. The red dress had no wrinkles in it. She had dressed for victory.
— Enough for who?
She did not answer.
Daniel rubbed the back of his neck.
— I was going to tell you.
That pulled a noise out of me. Not a sob. Not a laugh. Something brief and flat.
— When?
He blinked.
— Soon.
— Give me a date.
He couldn’t.
The projector changed slides again, spilling pale light over the whole scene. Employee photos flickered across the screen behind us—smiling faces from volunteer day, charity run, holiday lunch. There I was in one of them, holding a cardboard box of donated coats with Maris standing two people away, both of us looking into the camera, both hands visible, both faces open.
A month later, apparently, she was in my apartment eating olives from a dish I bought in Barcelona while Daniel opened wine in the kitchen.
My skin went cold.
Not weak. Cold.
The kind that clarifies.
— Did you ever sit on my couch?
Daniel shut his eyes for one second.
Maris answered for him.
— Elena.
— Did you?
Daniel swallowed.
— Yes.
Noor turned her face away sharply. Owen muttered something too low to catch. Someone at the far end of the terrace whispered, Jesus.
Maris finally lost a little of her polish.
It happened in the mouth first. The corners tightened.
— You’re making this theatrical,
she said.
There it was. Her insult, dressed up as criticism.
Not liar.
Not cruel.
Not wrong.
Theatrical.
As though the betrayal had been tasteful until I gave it a microphone.
I leaned closer, just enough that she had to stop pretending this was casual.
— You sat across from me in budget meetings for three months.
Her face held.
— Yes.
— You asked about my lease renewal.
— We work together.
— You sent me a link to a couples’ therapist article after the breakup.
For the first time, Daniel looked sick.
That detail had landed where it was supposed to.
Maris’s nostrils flared once.
— I was trying to be kind.
— No. You were measuring the damage.
That line moved through the crowd in silence. You could feel people take it in.
Daniel looked at me then, directly, as if he had just remembered I was a person rather than a stage he needed to cross.
— I handled it badly.
Badly.
Such a clean little word. The kind people use for late invoices and overcooked pasta.
My nails pressed half-moons into my palm.
— You lied in my bed for weeks.
Nobody moved.
Then a voice came from behind the dessert table.
— Maris?
It was Celia, our director.
She had been on the terrace the whole time, apparently, standing half in shadow near the awards station. She was still holding the speech cards she’d used earlier. Her expression was unreadable, which was worse than anger.
Maris straightened.
— Celia, this is personal.
— It became operational when you brought a non-employee to a private team event and then detonated half the staff in front of our clients.
I had not even noticed the Henderson account managers by the far rail until then. Two of them stood stiffly beside the city view, wine untouched, pretending not to hear while hearing every word.
A red pulse of humiliation went through Maris’s face.
Daniel looked like he wanted the stone under him to split open.
Celia stepped forward, heels quiet on the terrace.
— Daniel, you need to leave.
He looked at Maris again.
Still nothing from her.
He nodded once.
No apology to the room. No dramatic exit. He just reached for his coat draped over the chair, fumbled the sleeve, and walked toward the elevator with the shoulders of a man carrying something wet and heavy. The terrace doors opened with a rush of warmer air and closed behind him.
No one stopped him.
The city kept glittering beyond the glass.
Maris remained where she was.
Without Daniel beside her, the whole picture shifted. Her hand had nowhere to rest now. She set the glass down again, too carefully.
Celia looked at her for two long seconds.
— Conference room. Monday. Nine sharp.
Maris started to answer.
Celia turned away before she could.
That was crack number three, and it went all the way through.
The crowd loosened, but only slightly. Sound returned in thin strips. A cough. A chair pulled back. The whisper of fabric. Noor came to stand beside me without touching me.
— Do you want to go?
My first instinct was yes.
Get out. Get in a car. Peel off the dress. Wash the smell of smoke and cologne from my hair.
Instead I said,
— Not yet.
Because leaving too fast would hand the scene back to them. Because I had spent months shrinking to fit inside what they had done.
Noor nodded like she understood.
— Then let’s get you water.
At the bar, the bartender slid a fresh glass toward me. My hand shook only once, a quick bright tremor at the rim, then stilled. Across the terrace, Maris was speaking in a low voice to Celia, but the composure was gone now. One shoulder sat higher than the other. She kept smoothing the front of her dress as though a wrinkle had appeared only for her.
Owen came up on my other side.
— For the record,
he said, eyes on the skyline, not me,
— half the room already hated him when he started lecturing people about integrity in vendor calls.
That almost made me smile.
Almost.
The elevator dinged. More guests from another floor stepped out, saw the atmosphere, and hesitated. One of the Henderson managers quietly asked if he should reschedule Monday’s breakfast. Celia answered without looking away from Maris.
— Yes.
There went another cost.
Not the emotional one. The measurable one.
The kind companies write down.
At 9:47 p.m., Maris crossed the terrace toward me. No audience now, or fewer of one. Conversations had restarted in brittle clusters, but people were still listening.
She stopped an arm’s length away.
Her face was composed again, rebuilt but thinner.
— You enjoyed that.
The sentence hit with less force than she meant it to.
I drank some water first.
Cold. Metallic. Real.
— No.
— You could have spoken to me privately.
— You could have left him alone while he was still living with me.
A tiny movement in her jaw.
— Your relationship was already over.
— Then why hide?
She had no answer that wouldn’t shame her.
So she did what people do when facts corner them. She reached for status.
— Be careful,
she said softly.
— Offices remember scenes like this.
There it was. The threat under the powder.
Not I’m sorry.
Not I was wrong.
Be careful.
I looked past her, at the tables with their half-eaten salmon and collapsed napkins, at the projector still glowing, at the coworkers who had witnessed enough to understand exactly what that sentence meant.
Then I looked back at her.
— Good,
I said.
— Let them remember the right part.
She held my gaze for one second too long, then turned and walked toward the elevators without another word. Her heels struck the stone terrace in hard little clicks. When the doors opened, mirrored steel caught her reflection and split it into three versions of the same woman for a breath before she stepped inside and vanished.
Monday arrived gray and wet.
By 8:03 a.m., the office smelled like damp wool and printer toner. Heads lifted when I came in, then lowered with practiced speed. Nobody stopped me. Nobody offered pity. That was a gift.
At 9:00, Maris went into Conference Room C with Celia and someone from HR. At 9:06, Daniel’s company visitor access was revoked. At 9:18, Noor sent me the revised client schedule without comment. At 9:41, Owen dropped a pack of mints on my desk and said,
— Hostile environments require supplies.
At 10:12, Maris emerged carrying her laptop bag and the white orchid she kept on her windowsill.
That detail stayed with me.
The orchid.
One bloom had snapped off near the stem and was lying sideways in the potting bark, still perfect, just no longer attached.
The whole floor went very quiet as she walked past.
She did not look left or right. She did not look at me.
Her perfume lingered after the elevator doors closed.
By noon, her name had been removed from two meeting invites and the Henderson account had been reassigned. Celia stopped by my desk once, set down a folder, and said,
— Take tomorrow if you need it.
— I’ll stay.
She studied my face, then nodded.
The folder held routine budget drafts, nothing dramatic. Numbers. Notes. Revised targets. Normal work placed gently in front of me like a clean plate.
That evening, after most people left, I opened the bottom drawer of my desk and found the ceramic mug Maris had given me last Christmas. Pale blue. Gold rim. My initials on one side. She had smiled when I unwrapped it. Daniel had texted while I stood in the office kitchen holding it.
Did you get something good?
I stared at the mug for a long time.
Then I carried it to the trash room at the end of the hall.
Not smashed.
Not thrown.
Just set down, carefully, on top of a stack of broken-down cardboard boxes and a black garbage bag smelling faintly of orange peels and coffee grounds.
On my way back, I passed the conference room where I had first seen them months ago. The lights were off now. Through the narrow glass panel in the door, I could see only the reflection of the hallway and my own shape standing in it.
At 6:42 p.m., almost the same time I had once seen Daniel waiting in the lobby glass, I left the building with my coat buttoned to the throat. The rain had stopped, but the pavement still held the day in dark patches. Across the street, a florist was closing up. Buckets of roses were being dragged inside one by one, their petals bruised at the edges from the weather.
I stood there a moment under the awning, keys in hand, listening to buses sigh at the curb and water drip from the metal frame above me.
My phone buzzed.
Daniel.
One message.
I’m sorry.
Two words. Late. Small. Weightless.
The screen lit my fingers blue.
Traffic moved through the intersection in long wet ribbons. A cyclist passed with a paper bag tied to the handlebars, bread sticking out of the top. Somewhere behind me, the building’s lobby doors opened and shut, opened and shut, letting out brief squares of gold light.
I deleted the message without replying.
Then I crossed the street.
The florist had left a cracked ceramic planter beside the curb for pickup. Rainwater had pooled inside it around a handful of white petals, and one red ribbon from a bouquet was stuck to the rim, lifting and falling in the cold wind like it was trying to wave someone back.