About things that used to feel secondary and had now become the only things we could handle without reopening everything at once.

One evening, I found the tie I had chosen for that night still hanging where he had left it.

Perfect.

Untouched.

A small, precise reminder of a version of us that no longer existed.

I didn’t throw it away.

I didn’t move it, either.

Some things don’t need to be erased to be understood as finished.

A month later, we sat across from each other at the same table where we had shared countless ordinary mornings.

Coffee.

Silence.

No urgency.

“I spoke with a lawyer,” he said.

I nodded.

“I did too.”

There was no shock in either of us.

No attempt to change direction at the last moment.

Just acknowledgment.

“This isn’t because of what you did at the meeting,” he added after a pause.

“I know,” I said.

And I did.

Because what happened that night didn’t break us.

It revealed that something had already been broken long before either of us chose to look at it.

We didn’t argue about who was right.

We didn’t list mistakes or try to balance them against each other.

There was no need.

Sometimes, the cost of a choice isn’t punishment.

It’s clarity.

On the day I moved out, the apartment felt larger, quieter, as if it had been waiting for this shift without telling us.

I took only what was mine.

Not just objects.

But the version of myself I had set aside for too long.

At the door, I paused for a moment.

Not out of doubt.

Just to feel the weight of leaving without rushing past it.

Emiliano stood a few steps behind me.

He didn’t try to stop me.

He didn’t apologize again.

Some things, once understood, don’t need to be repeated.

“Take care,” he said.

“You too,” I replied.

It wasn’t dramatic.

It wasn’t final in the way stories often pretend endings should be.

It was quieter than that.

As I stepped outside, the air felt different—not lighter, but more honest somehow, as if it no longer required me to hold anything in place.

I didn’t know exactly what would come next.

But for the first time in a long time, I wasn’t choosing between what was comfortable and what was true.

I had already chosen.

And I was finally ready to live with it.