Chapter One: The Life She Didn't Choose
The alarm went off at 5:30 a.m.
Elena didn't move.
For a few seconds, she just lay there, staring at the ceiling, letting the sound drill into her skull until it became part of the silence. Her body felt heavy—like sleep hadn't actually done anything except pause the exhaustion.
Finally, she reached over and shut it off.
The apartment was quiet.
Too quiet.
There had been a time when mornings sounded different—footsteps in the hallway, cabinet doors opening, someone else moving through the space like it belonged to more than just her. Now it was just the faint hum of the refrigerator and the distant sound of traffic outside.
Two years.
Two years since she left, and some mornings still felt like she was waking up in a life that didn't quite fit.
"Mommy?"
The soft voice came from down the hall, small and still thick with sleep.
She sat up immediately. "Yeah, baby. I'm up."
A pause. Then the quiet shuffle of little feet.
Mason appeared in the doorway a second later, a blanket dragging behind him, hair sticking up in every direction. His eyes were half open, but the moment he saw her, he relaxed—like just knowing she was there was enough.
It hit her every time.
That trust.
That dependence.
That weight.
"Come here," she said, holding out her arms.
He didn't hesitate. He climbed into her lap like it was the most natural thing in the world, curling into her chest. SHe wrapped her arms around him automatically, pressing her cheek against the top of his head.
This part—that she never questioned.
No matter how tired she was, no matter how lost she felt in every other part of her life...being his mom was the one thing she knew she was doing right.
"You gotta go to daycare today," she murmured.
He groaned softly. "Nooooo."
She smiled, even though he couldn't see it. "Yeah, I know. I don't want to go to work either."
That was the truth.
Work wasn't terrible. It paid the bills—barely. It gave her structure. But it wasn't passion. It wasn't purpose. It was just.. necessary.
Everything in her life felt like that lately.
Necessary.
Not chosen.
By 7:15, they were out the door.
Mason in his little jacket. Backpack too big for his shoulders. Elena juggling her purse, coffee, and keys like she always did.
The daycare drop-off was quicker—quicker than it used to be. He had adjusted. Kids always did.
That didn't make it easier.
"Bye, Mommy," he said, already turning toward his teacher.
"Bye, baby," she answered, forcing a smile.
She stayed for a second longer than she needed to, watching him settle in. Watching him be ok without her.
That was the goal, right?
To raise a kid who doesn't need you for everything.
So why did it feel like something was being taken from her every time it happened?
Work blurred.
It always did.
Hours passed in emails, phone calls, and tasks that needed to get done whether she felt like doing them or not. Conversations that didn't matter. Smiles that didn't reach her eyes.
By the time her shift ended, her brain felt numb.
She picked Mason up, went home, made dinner—something quick, something easy--and sat with him while he talked about his day in that excited, rambling way only kids could.
She listened.
She always listened.
Even when her mind drifted.
Because she knew these moments mattered.
It wasn't until later—after bath time, after books, after she tucked him into bed—that the quiet came back.
That heavy, pressing quiet.
Elena stood in the doorway for a moment, watching him sleep. His chest rose and fell steadily, completely at peace.
She closed the door gently.
Then she walked into the living room and stopped.
This was the part she hated.
The part where there was nothing left to do.
No one to talk to.
No distraction big enough to drown out the thoughts that started creeping in.
She sank onto the couch, pulling her legs up beneath her, staring at nothing.
Is this it?
The question came again.
Louder this time.
More insistent.
She had done everything right.
She left when she needed to.
She built a safe space.
She took care of her child.
So why did it still feel like something was missing?
Why did it feel like she was living a life she hadn't actually chosen.
Her phone buzzed beside her.
A notification. Nothing important.
She didn't check it.
Instead, she leaned her head back against the couch and closed her eyes.
For a brief second, she let herself imagine something different.
Something more.
Something that didn't feel so... small.
Then she shook it off.
Because wanting more came with risk.
And she didn't do risk anymore.