The Card
The sun filtered weakly through the restaurant’s window, casting brittle patterns across the wooden table where I sat, a cup of lukewarm tea cradled between my hands. The chatter of the lunchtime crowd buzzed around me, a symphony of life I was only half a part of, and the clinking of silverware provided a rhythm that felt oddly nostalgic. I was sixty-five, once vibrant and full of dreams, now just another face in the crowd, nursing the remnants of a marriage that felt like a distant memory.
Five years ago, I stood in a cold Chicago courthouse, the air thick with unspoken words. Richard, my husband of thirty-seven years, had walked out like a man shedding an old coat. He had pressed a plastic card into my palm, his voice as calm as if he were handing me a bus ticket, not a reminder of our life together.
“Take it. That should be enough to help you for a little while.”
I didn’t cry then. I wanted to, but pride clamped down on my throat, a heavy vice that wouldn’t allow me to break. Instead, I slipped that card into my bag, feeling its weight like a stone that would never sink.
Life After the Split
Afterward, I rented a tiny room in a worn-down apartment building, the kind where the walls whispered secrets of other lives lived poorly. The ceiling bore ugly water stains, and the window rattled in the winter wind like a stray dog begging to come inside. My days morphed into a cycle of scrubbing strangers’ kitchens and watching cars drift past a pharmacy, hoping for cash from a kind stranger.
There were nights I went to bed hungry, the only company the salt and tea bags in my cupboard. I would lie there, staring at the ceiling, feeling the emptiness fill the room. I thought of Richard and our children, wondering if they ever thought of me. They had their own families now, their own burdens to bear. I told them I was managing, smiled through gritted teeth. I was a master of the lie.
But that card, that damned card. It sat in its old box, untouched, as I feigned strength. Maybe part of me thought that using it would mean admitting defeat, that I had allowed myself to be reduced to a single transaction. It felt like an insult, a price tag on almost four decades of partnership. I couldn’t let him win.