
After His Ex Faked Cancer, I Lost Our Baby
Chapter 4
The dry cleaner on West 84th is one of those places that hasn't changed in twenty years — the same hand-lettered sign, the same bell above the door, the same Mr. Papadopoulos behind the counter who remembers your name and your usual order without being asked. I've been coming here since I moved to the neighborhood. It is mine in the small, uncomplicated way that certain places become yours when you live alone long enough.
Whitney is already inside when I push through the door.
The bell announces me. She turns from the counter with the unhurried ease of someone who has been waiting, though her expression performs surprise with practiced warmth — eyes widening just enough, lips parting into something that almost passes for delight.
'Greta. What are the odds.'
The odds, I think, are exactly what she made them.
I move to the counter and set my ticket down. Mr. Papadopoulos disappears into the back. Whitney doesn't step aside — she shifts slightly, just enough to keep herself in my peripheral vision, close enough that I can smell the lilies again, that faint chemical undertone beneath the sweetness.
'You look tired,' she says. Her voice is soft, solicitous. The voice she uses when Ryder is in the room. 'Are you sleeping?'
'Fine, thank you.'
She tilts her head, and the light catches the necklace at her throat — a diamond pendant, single stone, the kind of piece that announces itself without trying. My eyes go to it for exactly one second before I look back at Mr. Papadopoulos's empty stool.
'Do you like it?' Whitney lifts one hand to touch it, fingers grazing the stone with the casual intimacy of someone who has already decided you've noticed. 'Ryder picked it out himself. After my last chemo session — the bad one, the one where I couldn't keep anything down for three days.' A small, brave smile. 'He said he wanted me to have something beautiful to look at when I felt like everything was falling apart.'
The refrigerator hum of the dry cleaner fills the silence. Somewhere in the back, plastic garment bags rustle against each other.
'That was kind of him,' I say.
The words come out level. Smooth. I am very far behind the wall and I am staying there.
Whitney watches me the way a cat watches something it has already decided to bat off the table — not urgency, just patience. When she realizes I am not going to give her anything more, the warmth in her expression thins by a degree.
Mr. Papadopoulos returns with my blouses in their plastic sheaths. I pay. I take the hangers. I say goodbye to him by name.
I do not say goodbye to Whitney.
Outside, I walk half a block and stop in the doorway of a closed bookshop, the garment bags folded over my arm. I take out my phone. I open the notes app — the one I started three days ago, after the dinner party, after I understood what kind of war this actually was — and I type the date, the location, the necklace, her exact words. *Ryder bought it to cheer her up after a rough chemo session.* I type it all, and then I lock the screen and keep walking.
Documentation. It is the only power I have right now, and I am not wasting it.
---
The month ends on a Thursday.
I know the exact hour because I have been counting down to it the way you count down to a verdict — not with hope, exactly, but with the grim need to know. Ryder is in the hallway, coat still on, keys in hand, and I am standing between him and the door.
'It's been a month,' I say. 'We agreed.'
Something moves across his face — not guilt, not quite. Something more complicated. He sets his keys on the entry table and turns to face me, and I watch him locate the version of this conversation that lets him be the reasonable one.
'Her doctors called this morning.' His voice is low, careful. 'They're saying weeks now, Greta. Not months. Weeks.'
'That's not what we agreed to.'
'I know what we agreed to.' The careful tone fractures, just at the edges. 'But what do you want me to do? Walk out on a dying woman because a calendar says I've put in my time? Is that the kind of person you want me to be?'
The heat in my chest is immediate and total. I breathe through it.
'I want you to be the person who comes home,' I say.
'I can't abandon her.' His voice rises, and there it is — the indignation of a man who has decided his guilt is a moral position. 'She has no one. If I leave now and she dies alone, I have to live with that. You're asking me to live with that so you don't have to be inconvenienced —'
'Inconvenienced.'
The word drops between us like something breakable hitting a stone floor.
Ryder stops. He has the grace, at least, to hear it.
I look at him — at the man I have been building a life with for five years, at the stranger wearing his face — and I feel something shift in my chest. Not breaking. Something quieter than that. Something that has been loosening for weeks finally letting go.
'Go,' I say.
He goes.
I stand in the hallway for a long time after the door closes, my hand pressed flat against my stomach, and I think about the notes app on my phone, and the diamond necklace, and the way he said *inconvenienced* without flinching.
I think about what I am building, and what I am going to need, and who I am going to call.
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