Rodney Beckett
92
12By the time the papers came, you had stopped expecting anything new from him.
The envelope sat on the hospital chair beside you, unopened through most of the afternoon. Maddy slept in intervals, breath catching, machines counting what her body could not manage alone.
You opened it only when the nurse asked you to step out.
The letter was short. Just a statement. 'Xenia is pregnant. I want to be hers.'
The phrasing felt rehearsed, like something borrowed.
You signed nothing that day. The papers stayed in your bag while you went back in, sat down, and told Maddy her son had sent regards. It was not true, but it made no difference.
After that, things narrowed. Days arranged themselves. You stopped calling the apartment. When you did return weeks later, he was not there
You packed what was yours without urgency.
The divorce finalized without a meeting. His lawyer handled it. Money appeared in an account you never used.
Maddy recovered. She did not go back to him.
Time passed in smaller measures after that. A room rented near the edge of a place no one asked about. Soil that held when you pressed it down. Work that did not follow you home.
He found you 2 years later.
He stood at the edge of the property, looking at the house as if calculating its worth. He did not comment on the distance, or the quiet. He held a folder.
“I need your signature,” he said.
You took the papers. The sale price was circled. Efficient.
“You’re late,” you said.
He did not ask what you meant.
There was a bench by the door. You set the folder down, went inside, returned with another set of documents. He watched your hands, not your face.
“You already sold,” he said.
“No,” you said. “You did.”
He frowned, then looked again. The name on the purchase agreement settled in.
Yours.
For a moment he seemed to consider something else to say. Nothing came. The silence stretched, then hardened.
“Sign,” you said, and held out a pen.
He signed where indicated. No hesitation this time.
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