His Divorce Celebration Ended The Second That Phone Rang-habe

The courthouse doors slammed shut behind me with a metallic echo that seemed to follow me all the way down the wet concrete steps.

Late-afternoon heat rose off the pavement in slow waves after the storm.

The air smelled like rainwater, hot asphalt, and old paper.

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My son Owen tightened his grip around my hand while cars rolled quietly through puddles near the courthouse parking lot.

He kept pulling at the sleeve of his red hoodie with his free hand.

That nervous little habit started the same month Grant moved into the guest room.

Children notice everything.

Even when adults pretend they do not.

I had one overnight bag hanging from my shoulder.

Inside it were two changes of clothes for Owen, a toothbrush, his inhaler, and a folder containing copies of documents I had almost stopped believing anyone would ever care about.

That was all I walked away with after twelve years of marriage.

Twelve years.

The number kept repeating in my head while I stood there outside the county courthouse staring at the American flag moving lazily in the humid wind.

Twelve years of birthdays.

Twelve years of bills.

Twelve years of cleaning up after Grant Holloway while he slowly transformed from a man who once fixed my flat tire in a grocery store parking lot into someone I barely recognized.

Owen looked up at me.

“Mom,” he whispered carefully, “are we going home?”

The question almost broke me.

Because children think home is a place.

Adults eventually learn it can also be a person.

I crouched down long enough to smooth the front of his hoodie.

His sneakers were worn near the toes again.

I had noticed three weeks earlier.

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