
The Day I Stopped Loving Him
Chapter 3
I set my alarm for six-fifteen.
Not because Art History started at eight. Not because I needed the extra time to get ready. I set it for six-fifteen because I wanted to be in that classroom before anyone else arrived, and I wanted to choose my own seat for the first time in two years.
The building was quiet when I got there. The hallway smelled like floor wax and old paper, and the overhead lights in the corridor were still doing that early-morning flicker, half-awake. I pushed open the door to the lecture hall and stood there for a moment, looking at the rows of empty seats.
For two years, I had walked past all of them.
For two years, I had gone straight to the back row, to the far-right corner where the seat cushion was slightly thicker and the angle to the projector was easy on the eyes. I had learned that Julian preferred it because it was warm in winter and he could leave early without anyone noticing. I had arrived thirty minutes before every class to make sure no one else took it. I had carried a second coffee — his iced Americano, always a medium, never a large — in my bag alongside my own things, the cup sweating cold through my notebook by the time he showed up at two minutes to the hour.
I walked to the front row.
Center seat. Right in front of the lectern.
I sat down, pulled out my notebook, and set my tea on the corner of the desk. Just mine. One cup, still steaming, with the cardboard sleeve I'd folded twice because the seam always came loose. I wrapped both hands around it and looked at the blank whiteboard and felt something settle in my chest — quiet and a little raw, the way a bruise feels when you stop pressing on it.
The room filled up slowly around me. I heard people come in, heard the usual Monday morning sounds — bags dropping, chairs scraping, the low murmur of conversations that hadn't fully woken up yet. A few people glanced at me with mild curiosity. I was not a front-row person, by reputation. I had always been the girl in the back, half-hidden behind Julian's shoulder.
I opened my notebook and started reviewing last week's slides.
The door opened again at three minutes to eight. I didn't turn around. I didn't need to. I recognized the particular rhythm of his walk — that easy, unhurried pace that always made it seem like he was doing the room a favor by showing up. And then Blair's voice, low and bright, saying something that ended in a laugh.
I turned a page in my notebook.
I heard them moving toward the back. I heard the moment they stopped.
The pause lasted maybe four seconds. Long enough to be uncomfortable. Long enough for the people nearby to glance up.
The seat was empty. Just empty — no bag, no saved coffee, no evidence that anyone had ever claimed it on his behalf. Just an ordinary seat in an ordinary row, available to whoever wanted it.
Julian didn't sit down right away. I could feel him scanning the room the way you feel a shift in air pressure, some awareness at the back of my neck that had nothing to do with looking. He found me. I knew the exact moment he did because the pause stretched a beat longer, sharpened.
I kept my eyes on my notebook.
Blair said something. He answered. They sat somewhere in the middle rows — I heard the chairs — and then Professor Aldridge walked in and the lecture began.
I took the best notes I'd taken all semester.
There was something almost clarifying about sitting here, this close to the front. I could see the details on the projected slides without squinting. I could hear every word without the back-row audio lag. I wrote down things I'd been half-missing for months, sitting in that warm corner at the back, too focused on passing notes and managing someone else's boredom to pay attention to the actual content.
Midway through the lecture, I felt it — the specific, crawling sensation of being stared at. Not glanced at. Stared at. I let it sit there for a moment, the way you let an itch sit before you decide whether to scratch it.
I didn't turn around.
I underlined a date in my notes instead.
The lecture ran its full ninety minutes. When Aldridge dismissed us, I capped my pen, closed my notebook, and started packing my bag with the same calm, unhurried movements I'd been practicing all morning in my head. Around me, chairs scraped and zippers pulled and the room began to empty in that familiar post-class rush.
I had my bag on my shoulder and was three steps from the door when he appeared in front of me.
Julian looked — not quite the way I expected. I'd braced for something smooth, some easy deflection wrapped in charm. But his jaw was tight. There was a tension around his eyes that he wasn't fully controlling, and underneath it, something that looked almost like disorientation. Like a person who'd reached for something in the dark and found the shelf empty.
"What was that?" His voice was low, angled away from the last few students still filing out.
I waited.
"You didn't—" He stopped, recalibrated, and I watched him find the version of this he wanted to use. His chin lifted slightly. "You're seriously doing this? Because of Friday?" The irritation sharpened into something more familiar, more practiced. "I told you, Blair needed me. She was having a hard night. I can't just abandon her because you decided to wear a fancy dress."
He said *fancy dress* the way you'd say *minor inconvenience*.
I looked at him.
Not the way I used to look at him — that careful, hopeful attention I'd spent two years refining, always reading his face for signs of what he needed, what mood he was in, how to make myself useful. I looked at him the way you look at something you're trying to remember clearly, so you don't misremember it later.
He was handsome. He was still handsome. That hadn't changed. But standing here in the flat fluorescent light of an emptying classroom, with my notebook under my arm and my own tea finished and nothing left to offer him, I could see the shape of it clearly — the way his irritation was really just surprise, and his surprise was really just the shock of something he'd always taken for granted not being there anymore.
He wasn't angry at me.
He was angry at the empty seat.
"Ivy." His hand moved toward my arm — that automatic, proprietary reach, the one that had always worked before.
I stepped back. Not dramatically. Just enough.
"Borrow over," I said. "I'm in a hurry."
I moved past him before he could answer.
The hallway was bright and cold and full of people walking to their next class, and I walked with them, my bag solid on my shoulder, my steps even despite the small ache still at my ankle from Friday night. Behind me, I heard nothing. No footsteps following. No voice calling after me.
Just the ordinary sound of a Monday morning carrying on without him in it.
You may also like





