
After My Man Matched Answers with His Mistress
Chapter 3
He was standing outside my office building on a Wednesday.
I almost didn't see him. I had my head down, bag over one shoulder, already thinking about the grocery run I needed to make before the rain started. Then I looked up and there he was — Kolson, in the gray jacket I'd helped him pick out two winters ago, holding a coffee cup in each hand.
I stopped.
He crossed the distance between us before I could move. His voice came out low and fast, like he'd been rehearsing it and was afraid of losing his place. "I know you don't want to see me. I know. But I just — I needed you to know I've been thinking about everything. All of it. I miss you, Nori. I want to fix this. I think we can fix this if you just let me—"
"What is that?" I said.
He blinked. Looked down at the cup in his right hand. "It's your order. Oat milk, one sugar, from the place on Pike. I remembered."
I looked at the cup. Then I looked at him.
"You remembered my order," I said. "You forgot everything else."
I walked past him to the subway.
He called my name once. I didn't turn around. The evening crowd swallowed me up, and I kept moving, and I didn't let myself feel anything until I was underground and the train was pulling in and the noise was loud enough to cover whatever sound I might have made.
I didn't make any sound. I just stood there and held the pole and watched the dark tunnel walls go by.
---
Soren was already at the corner table when I got to the coffee shop Saturday morning. Laptop open, the same focused stillness he always had. He glanced up when I came in, nodded, went back to his screen.
I ordered. Sat down. Opened my planner.
For a few minutes we just worked, the way we'd started doing on these Saturday mornings without ever officially deciding to. The rain was coming down outside. Someone had the heat up too high. It was comfortable in the specific way that things are comfortable when nobody is performing anything.
"How's the launch prep going?" Soren asked. He wasn't looking up from his laptop.
"Getting there," I said.
"Portland timeline still Q2?"
I looked over at him. "You remembered that."
"Ellis mentioned it." He closed his laptop halfway. "What's the actual blocker right now?"
I meant to give him the short version. The polite, summarized version I gave people who asked out of courtesy. But he was looking at me with that particular attention of his — the kind that didn't rush you, didn't fill in your sentences, just waited — and I heard myself start talking.
I told him about the Portland expansion and the distribution gap we hadn't solved yet. About the competitor who'd moved into the market six weeks ahead of schedule and what that meant for our positioning. About the internal resistance from the sales team, who wanted another quarter to "stabilize" even though stabilizing at this point meant losing ground we couldn't get back. I told him about the conversation with Claire, and the data I'd pulled, and the thing I'd almost let go of in that meeting before I didn't.
I talked for twenty minutes. Maybe more.
When I finally stopped, I realized I'd been leaning forward with both elbows on the table, my coffee going cold beside my planner. Soren was watching me with that quiet, level attention. Not nodding along to be polite. Actually listening.
"The sales team's not wrong to be nervous," he said. "But they're solving for the wrong risk."
"That's exactly it," I said. "That's exactly what I couldn't get Paul to see."
"You'll get him there." He said it simply, like a fact. Then he opened his laptop again.
I sat back. Picked up my coffee. It was cold, but I drank it anyway.
I couldn't remember the last time I'd talked about my work like that. Without editing. Without watching someone's eyes glaze over, without adding *I could be wrong* at the end of every sentence, without feeling like I was taking up too much space in a conversation that was supposed to be about something else.
I looked out the window at the rain.
Soren was already typing. He didn't make anything of it. Neither did I.
But I noticed.
---
Jess called on Sunday afternoon.
I knew from her voice in the first three seconds that she hadn't called to check on me. She'd called because she'd been asked to, or because she'd heard something she felt obligated to pass along, and she was going to feel better once she had.
"I just wanted you to know," she said carefully, "that Kolson's been talking to people. He's saying it was a rough patch. That Azalea is just a colleague and you — that you maybe took things the wrong way."
"I see," I said.
"I'm not saying I believe him. I just thought you should know what's going around."
"I appreciate that, Jess."
A pause. "Are you okay?"
"I'm fine," I said. "Thank you for telling me."
I hung up and sat at my kitchen table for a long moment. The apartment was quiet. Outside, the sky was doing that thing it does in Seattle in March — not quite raining, not quite not.
I opened my planner to a blank page.
I wrote the date at the top. Then I started writing.
Not from memory. From the screenshots I'd saved to a folder on my phone the night I left, the ones I'd taken methodically before I put his phone back on the nightstand. I pulled them up one by one and I wrote down the dates. The times. The content, summarized in plain language. The voice memo I hadn't played that night — I played it now. Her voice was warm and easy, the kind of warm that knows exactly what it's doing. I wrote that down too.
The watch. The bisque. The pet names. The late calls logged on his phone bill, the ones I'd noticed weeks before and told myself meant nothing because I was good at telling myself things meant nothing.
I wrote it all down. Dates on the left. Details on the right. Clean columns, like a work document. Like something that could be presented to a room and not argued with.
I didn't cry while I was doing it. My handwriting stayed even. My coffee went cold again and I didn't notice.
When I was done, I read it back once. Then I closed the planner and put it in my bag.
I got my keys. I drove to the grocery store. I bought what I needed for the week, came home, put everything away.
Then I got back in the car.
I sat in the parking garage for a while with the engine off and the radio off and the dark pressing in around the windows.
I cried the way I always did — quietly, without an audience, until it was done.
Then I drove home and went to bed.
In the morning, I had work to do.
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