I sat in the stark stillness of the exam room, twisting the leather strap of my purse until my knuckles blanched. Sunlight streamed through the blinds, striping the walls with narrow bars of light that felt oddly like confinement.
Dr. Evans, a warm-faced woman in her late fifties with gold-rimmed glasses, studied her screen with a deep crease between her brows. She glanced at me, then back at the monitor, the soft clicking of her mouse filling the silence like a ticking clock.
“Mrs. Miller, you’re fifty-eight, correct?” she asked gently, her tone professional but unsettling.
“Yes. I just retired from the district,” I replied, trying to steady myself. “Is something wrong? Did you find something?”
She swiveled her chair toward me, her expression layered with hesitation and concern.
“Susan, I need to ask you something personal,” she said, slipping off her glasses. “Have you and your husband maintained a typical intimate relationship over the years?”
Heat flooded my face. The question struck precisely at the wound I had kept hidden for nearly two decades. Michael and I had been married thirty years—celebrated with a pearl anniversary and staged smiles—but for eighteen of those years, we had lived like strangers.
It began in the summer of 2008. We were both forty. Our son, Jake, had just left for college, and the house echoed with a new, hollow quiet.
Michael and I had been college sweethearts, marrying soon after graduation and settling into a predictable rhythm. He worked as an engineer—methodical, steady, emotionally reserved. I taught English at the local high school. Our life was safe and stable, like a glass of water left overnight on a bedside table—harmless, undisturbed, and utterly flavorless.
Then I met Ethan.
He was the new art teacher, five years younger, with laughter lines etched at the corners of his eyes and paint permanently staining his fingertips. He kept fresh wildflowers on his desk and hummed unfamiliar melodies while grading. He moved through the world as if it were something to savor, not simply survive.
“Susan, what do you think of this one?” he asked one afternoon, stepping into my classroom with a watercolor of a hillside bursting with bold, untamed blossoms.
“It’s beautiful,” I said—and I felt it.
“Then keep it,” he insisted, placing it in my hands. “You remind me of these wildflowers. Quiet, but full of life—just waiting for the right season.”
Those words unlocked something inside me I had long kept sealed. We began lingering in the faculty lounge, wandering through the school garden, sharing coffee that gradually turned into wine. I knew the path we were on was reckless and predictable. But being seen—truly seen—not as a wife or mother fulfilling roles, but as a woman with depth and desire, felt like rain falling on drought-cracked earth.
Michael sensed the subtle change.
“You’ve been staying late a lot,” he remarked one evening from his usual spot on the sectional.
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