I walked into the notary office with my back straight and my breath measured, because I already knew the past was waiting for me inside. I did not need to see them to feel them. The air carried the scent of citrus cleaner and money spent without hunger, the kind of smell that belonged to people who never learned how to wait for mercy.
My shoes struck the polished floor with a rhythm I had practiced alone at home, not for confidence but for control.
I folded my arms across my chest, not for comfort but to keep my pulse from betraying me in front of strangers.
The receptionist smiled with professional enthusiasm and gestured down a narrow hallway, as if this were just another appointment and not a reckoning.
I moved forward anyway, because I did not come here to be welcomed. I came to finish something that had been left open too long.
Somewhere deep inside, I sensed that whatever waited behind that door would not unfold according to their expectations.
Inside the conference room, I saw him first. Adrian sat at the table with the posture of a man who believed space belonged to him by default.
He wore a charcoal suit I once pressed with careful hands, and he smiled with the same confident curve that used to signal a lie delivered without apology.
Beside him sat Lillian Moore, once his assistant, now his lover, her copper hair styled to demand attention she had not earned.
Her gaze slid over me with a sharp curiosity that felt less like interest and more like appraisal.
At the far end of the table, Eleanor Walsh sat upright with regal stiffness, fingers wrapped around a designer handbag like a weapon. Her eyes narrowed the moment she saw me, her mouth already prepared for judgment. The three of them looked at me the way people look at a debt they resent having to acknowledge.
I did not sit when Adrian gestured toward an empty chair, because I refused to accept permission from a man who had broken vows like glass.
I remained standing and let the silence speak first.
I reminded myself that the last time I stood in a room with them, I walked out with a divorce decree and a scar I refused to turn into poetry.
The notary, Mr. Leonard Harris, cleared his throat with practiced calm.
He was the only person in the room who seemed untouched by the tension, grounded in the neutrality of his role. When he looked at me, there was no pity in his eyes, only respect shaped by procedure.
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