“Don’t walk in with me—people will think it’s weird,” she said as we parked before her company party. I stopped the car and let her out. She laughed, called me “too sensitive,” and went inside. I drove home, packed my things, and left a note saying, “Didn’t want to make things awkward.” She came back late, slightly drunk and smiling…

30

“Don’t walk in with me. They’ll think it’s weird,” she said as we parked outside her office party. I stopped the car and let her out.

She laughed, called me sensitive, and went inside. I drove home, packed my clothes, and left a note. Didn’t want to make it weird.

She came home late, tipsy and smiling, found the empty closet, and started calling me crying. I’m twenty-eight, male, and that night I sat in my car outside the Meridian Hotel with the engine running, watching my girlfriend, Sarah, walk through the glass doors alone. Two hours later, I was in a different hotel room across town, and she was calling me seventeen times in a row.

We had been together for two years. We shared an apartment, split the bills, and talked about getting a dog. I thought I knew where we stood.

I thought we were building something real. But that night, parked outside her company holiday party, Sarah turned to me and said the words that ended it all. “Don’t walk in with me.

They’ll think it’s weird.”

I stopped the car. The valet was already approaching. Sarah laughed, light and casual, like she had just made a joke about the weather.

“You’re being too sensitive,” she said, already opening her door. “It’s just easier this way.”

She stepped out, smoothed her dress, and walked inside without looking back. The valet asked if I was staying.

I said no and pulled away from the curb. What Sarah didn’t know was that I had been adding things up for weeks. The way she never posted photos of us.

The way she introduced me as her friend to her boss at the grocery store. The way her coworkers didn’t know my name, even though we had been together for two years. I drove home in complete silence.

No music. No podcast. Just the sound of my turn signal clicking at every intersection.

By the time I pulled into our apartment complex, I had made my decision. I walked into our bedroom and pulled my suitcase from the closet. I packed my clothes, my laptop, my charger, and the watch my father gave me.

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