SERVE HER COLD

1312 Words
The string quartet was playing their song. Sophia Ward sat across from her husband in the same corner booth where he’d proposed five years ago, and she watched him slide an envelope across the white tablecloth with the same steady hand that used to cup her face when he kissed her goodnight. She smiled. She actually smiled. Because the envelope was thick and cream-colored and tied with a thin gold ribbon, and their anniversary was three days away, and Marcus Hale had never once been early with a gift but maybe—maybe this year, he was trying. “Open it,” Marcus said. He was wearing the navy suit she’d picked out for him last spring. His jaw was freshly shaved. His eyes were calm and steady, and something about the way he held his wine glass—loose, almost careless—made her stomach tighten in a way she couldn’t name. Sophia pulled the ribbon. Unfolded the flap. Slid out the papers inside. The first word her eyes caught was DISSOLUTION. The second was MARRIAGE. Her fingers went numb. The papers trembled in her grip. She read the first paragraph three times, and each time the words rearranged themselves into the same impossible sentence: the marriage between Marcus Hale and Sophia Ward is irretrievably broken. “It’s better this way,” Marcus said. He said it the way someone talks about switching to a new phone plan. Light. Practical. Like he was doing her a favor. “We both know this hasn’t been working. I’ve outgrown—” “Outgrown what?” Her voice came out thin. Wrong. Like it belonged to someone smaller than her. Marcus tilted his head. That look. She knew that look—the one he used when she cried over the miscarriage, the one he used when she asked why he came home at 3 AM smelling like a different perfume. Patient. Almost kind. Like she was a child who didn’t understand the math. “You were a chapter, Sophia. A beautiful chapter. But you were never the whole book.” Something cracked behind her ribs. Not her heart. Something deeper—the part of her that had spent five years building a home inside a man who was now handing her an eviction notice over candlelight. She looked around the restaurant. The waitress at the bar suddenly found something fascinating about her notepad. The hostess turned her back. The couple two tables over cut their eyes away fast. Everyone knew. Every single person in this restaurant knew what that envelope was before she did. Marcus had probably rehearsed this moment. Picked the restaurant because it was public, because he knew she wouldn’t scream in public. He’d calculated her grief like a seating arrangement. “You brought me to our place,” she whispered. “The place where you got down on one knee and told me you’d love me until you died.” “Sophia—” “You brought me here to end it.” Marcus sighed. Not a guilty sigh. An annoyed one. Like she was making this harder than it needed to be. “The apartment is yours. I’m not going to fight over the small stuff. My attorney has been generous. You should read the terms before you get emotional.” Emotional. Five years of waking up next to this man. Five years of cooking his meals and ironing his shirts and believing his lies when he said the late nights were business. Five years of swallowing the word lonely because she thought love was supposed to taste like sacrifice. And he called it emotional. She should have cried. The old Sophia would have cried—would have begged, probably. Would have asked what she did wrong, as if the failure of a marriage was a stain she’d left on his good shirt. But something strange was happening inside her chest. The crack was spreading, yes. But it wasn’t breaking her open. It was breaking her free. Like a fist unclenching after years of holding on too tight. She set the papers down. Placed both palms flat on the table. Looked at the man she’d married with clear eyes for the first time in years. He was already looking at his phone. His screen lit up. A notification. He angled it away from her, but the restaurant was dim and the screen was bright and she saw it anyway—a selfie of a woman in black lingerie, lips parted, one hand tangled in dark hair. The caption read: Miss you already, baby. And around the woman’s throat, catching the light like a stolen star, was a pendant. A small gold oval with a tiny emerald at its center. Sophia’s grandmother’s necklace. The one Marcus told her he’d lost at the dry cleaner six months ago. The one she’d cried over because it was the only thing she had left from a woman who died before Sophia could remember her face. His mistress was wearing her dead grandmother’s necklace. In a selfie. Sent to Sophia’s husband while Sophia sat three feet away being handed the wreckage of her life. Something shifted behind Sophia’s eyes. Not sadness. Not even anger. Something quieter and far more dangerous. The kind of calm that comes right before a woman stops being afraid. She reached across the table and picked up Marcus’s wine glass. A sixty-dollar Barolo. His favorite. He looked up from his phone. “What are you—” She held the glass over his lap. Tilted it. Let the wine pour slow—a long, deliberate stream of dark red that spread across his navy suit like a wound blooming. Marcus shot to his feet. His chair screeched. The restaurant went silent—every fork, every whisper, every breath pulled into a vacuum. Sophia stood. She was shorter than him. She’d always been shorter. But in this moment, with wine dripping off his thousand-dollar suit and his mouth hanging open like a fish dragged out of water, she felt ten feet tall. She leaned close. Her lips almost touched his ear. “You said I was too weak for your world,” she whispered. “Pray to God you’re right.” She turned and walked through the restaurant with her back straight and her chin up and her eyes dry. Not one person stopped her. Not one person spoke. The string quartet had gone silent. The only sound was her heels on the marble floor, each step sharp as a gunshot. She pushed through the double doors. The night air hit her face—cool, clean, tasting like rain. The parking garage was three levels down, and she made it to the second level before her hands started shaking. The elevator wasn’t working. She took the stairs. Her heels echoed in the concrete stairwell, bouncing off the walls, making it sound like someone was following her. The garage was dim. Half the lights were out. She reached for her keys and realized they were still on the restaurant table, in her purse, next to the divorce papers and the remains of a marriage she’d given everything to. She heard them before she saw them. Footsteps. Three sets. Heavy and unhurried, coming from behind a concrete pillar to her left. Three men stepped out of the shadows. Big. Broad. The kind of men who made their living with their fists. The biggest one—shaved head, neck tattoo, a jaw like a cinder block—stopped ten feet from her and cracked his knuckles. Sophia backed up. Her spine hit cold concrete. The cameras overhead were dark. Every single red light—dead. The big one smiled. It was the worst smile she’d ever seen. “Mr. Hale sends his regards,” he said. “You weren’t supposed to make a scene.”
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