
My Husband Missed My Cancer to Collect My Sister
Chapter 3
Cassian started coming home later.
I noticed. I just stopped saying anything about it.
The first week after Arlet arrived, he told me he had helped her get settled at the Meridian — a hotel on the Upper East Side, quiet and expensive, the kind of place you book when you want someone to feel taken care of without having to do the taking care yourself. He mentioned it the way you mention a work errand. Casual. Already past it.
"She's been through a lot," he said, loosening his tie at the bedroom mirror. "The divorce was ugly. She needs stability right now."
I was sitting on the edge of the bed with a book open in my lap. I hadn't turned a page in twenty minutes.
"Of course," I said.
He looked at me in the mirror. I looked back. Neither of us said anything else.
That was how it went. He would come home at eight, then nine, then sometimes past ten. He always had a reason. A consult that ran long. Traffic. A call with Arlet that went later than expected. He said her name the way you say the name of someone you are worried about — with a particular weight, a particular care. I had never heard him say my name that way.
I stopped asking where he had been around day four.
He didn't notice I had stopped.
---
The attorney's office was on the forty-second floor of a building in Midtown, with floor-to-ceiling windows and a view of the city that felt almost aggressive in its clarity. Her name was Patricia Voss. She had short gray hair and the kind of stillness that comes from having heard everything.
I set the folder on her desk. Inside were photographs I had taken on my phone — financial documents, account statements, the deed to the apartment, the prenuptial agreement Cassian had asked me to sign three years ago and I had signed without reading carefully enough.
She went through them without rushing.
"You've been thorough," she said.
"I had time," I said.
She asked me questions. I answered them. We talked about the apartment, the accounts, the timeline. I told her I wanted the process to be clean and fast. I told her I did not want mediation. I told her I was not interested in negotiating.
She looked at me over her reading glasses. "Is there anything that might complicate the filing? Health circumstances, dependents, anything pending?"
I thought about the appointment I had on Thursday. The ultrasound. The small, steady heartbeat I had not yet heard but already knew was there.
"Nothing that affects the filing," I said.
She nodded and made a note.
I took the subway home and sat in the last car, my folder on my lap, watching the tunnel walls blur past the window. I thought about the apartment. The way I had moved through it these past two weeks — quietly, carefully, like someone already in the process of leaving. A box of books in the closet. My grandmother's earrings moved to my coat pocket. The external hard drive with my documents, already in my bag.
Cassian hadn't noticed any of it.
He was too busy reading to Arlet.
---
I went to the hospital on a Wednesday.
It was a prenatal check — routine, early, just a confirmation of what Dr. Hale had already told me. The clinic was in a different building from the main hospital, connected by a covered walkway on the third floor. I had timed it carefully. Cassian's schedule had him in surgery until two.
I was early. The appointment wasn't until eleven-thirty, and I had forty minutes, so I walked.
The walkway passed through the oncology wing.
I wasn't looking for him. I want to be clear about that. I was walking with my head down, my coat buttoned, thinking about the ultrasound and what I would say to Chelsea afterward. I was not looking for anything.
But I saw the room.
The door was half open. The light inside was the soft, low kind — someone had angled the blinds. And there was Cassian.
He was sitting in a chair pulled close to the bed. Not at the foot of it, the way you sit when you are visiting. Close. The way you sit when you are staying. He had a book open in his hands, and he was reading aloud, his voice low and unhurried, and Arlet was lying against the pillows with her eyes closed and a faint smile on her face.
He reached over without stopping his reading and adjusted her blanket. Just smoothed it at the edge, a small gesture, automatic. The gesture of someone who has been sitting there long enough to notice the blanket had shifted.
I stood in the hallway and I watched him.
I watched the angle of his body — leaned in, oriented entirely toward her. I watched his hands, which were gentle in a way I had spent three years trying to earn. I watched the quality of his attention, the specific, unhurried focus of a man who was exactly where he wanted to be.
I had never seen him look like that.
Not once. Not at me.
The hallway was cold. Or maybe that was just me. I became aware of a sound — low, distant, like something underwater — and then I realized it was my own pulse, loud in my ears. My hand went to the wall.
The cramping started low and sudden, a clench that took my breath.
I pressed my palm flat against the wall and breathed. Once. Twice. The pain tightened and I made a sound I didn't mean to make — small, involuntary — and a nurse passing behind me stopped.
"Ma'am? Are you all right?"
I wasn't.
The next few minutes happened in pieces. A wheelchair. Someone's hand on my arm. A voice on a radio. I was aware of being moved, of a different hallway, a different floor, of fluorescent lights sliding past overhead.
I kept my hand over my stomach the whole time.
I did not look back at the room.
He was still reading when they wheeled me away. I don't think he ever looked up.
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