You stare at him as if the room has dropped ten degrees in a single breath.
The apartment is small, warm, and filled with the quiet leftovers of your wedding day. A paper box with half-eaten cake sits on the kitchen counter. One white heel lies near the couch, the other tipped over by the door like it fainted before you did. The cheap gold ribbon tied around the bouquet is still looped around your wrist, and for one terrible second, everything looks so ordinary that his confession feels impossible.
But your body knows before your mind does.
Your hands go cold first. Then your throat tightens. Then your heart begins knocking so hard it feels less like fear and more like a warning from inside your ribs.
Obinna is still sitting on the edge of the bed, his wedding shirt half unbuttoned, his expression calm in the dim yellow light. Too calm. That calmness frightens you more than panic would have. Panic you could understand. Panic would mean regret, confusion, accident. Calm means intention.
“Why?” you whisper again, but the word breaks in half on the way out.
He lowers his eyes, and the movement is so natural that it almost makes you hate him. For a year, you learned his silences the way other women learn the lines of a lover’s face. You learned what his pauses meant, what his hands meant, what the set of his mouth meant when he was trying not to burden you with his sadness. Now all of those memories begin to tilt sideways, like paintings sliding off their nails.
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