
The Last Page He Wrote For Her
Chapter 2
Evelyn
I didn't sleep.
I sat in the guest room — not our room, not the bed I'd shared with Adrian for four years — and held the little hand-stitched book in my lap. The fire was already going in the small hearth, Rosa must have lit it before bed. I watched the flames for a while. Then I opened the book to the first page.
My own handwriting. A date from seven years ago, and below it, Adrian's voice as I'd caught it: *The character doesn't know what she wants yet. Neither do I. That's how you know it's real.*
I tore the page out.
Fed it to the fire.
Then the next one. And the next. I didn't rush. I did it the way you do something you've decided on completely — steadily, without ceremony. The paper caught fast, edges going amber then black. Three weeks of work. Seven years of listening. All of it gone in under ten minutes, and I didn't cry once.
When the last page was ash, I closed the empty covers and set them on the grate too.
I watched until there was nothing left.
---
At seven in the morning I heard Lily's voice in the hallway, bright and unselfconscious the way only children can be at that hour.
"Rosa, if Mom wants to come to the beach with us today, what do I do? Aunt Sienna said Mom makes everything awkward."
I went very still.
"Miss Lily." Rosa's voice was careful. "Your mom is your mom —"
"But I want Aunt Sienna." A pause. The sound of small feet shifting. "She reads me Dad's stories. Mom doesn't even read them."
I stood on my side of the door and didn't move.
The irony of it was almost funny. Adrian had a rule — no unfinished work left the study, no one read the drafts until he was ready. I'd spent years typing his words without being allowed to read them end to end. He'd hand me pages out of order sometimes, like he was protecting something. I'd thought it was just his process. His particular, precious process.
And Sienna. Sienna had sat with Lily and read her the stories I'd typed. My keystrokes. My hours. My eyes going dry under that desk lamp at midnight.
She read them to my daughter, and my daughter preferred her for it.
I heard Rosa murmur something gentle and then Lily's footsteps retreating down the hall, already distracted by something else, already gone.
I sat on the edge of the bed and looked at my hands for a moment.
Then I picked up my phone and texted Adrian.
*Lunch today? Just us three. It's my birthday.*
I stared at those words after I sent them. *Just us three.* As if that were still a thing that existed. As if three still meant what I thought it meant.
He replied thirty minutes later: *Okay. Send the address.*
I booked The Ivy Rose.
---
We used to go there when we were first together, before Edinburgh meant a villa and a study and a life built around his next book. A narrow restaurant on Rose Street with dark wood booths and wine that came in mismatched glasses. Adrian had proposed to me two blocks away. We'd gone back to The Ivy Rose after and split a bottle of something too expensive and laughed too loud and the waiter had pretended not to notice.
At eleven fifty, my phone buzzed.
*Something came up. Can't make it.*
I read it once. Set the phone face-down on the kitchen counter. Picked it back up and read it again.
Then I went upstairs, changed out of my cardigan into the grey coat I wore when I wanted to feel like myself, and called a cab.
I wasn't going to wait. I was going to confirm.
---
The cab dropped me on Rose Street just past noon. The rain had stopped but the cobblestones were still dark with it, and the cold had that particular Edinburgh edge that gets under your collar no matter what you're wearing.
I saw them through the window before I reached the door.
The restaurant had floor-to-ceiling glass along the front, the kind that's meant to feel open and inviting. Right now it felt like a display case.
Adrian. Sienna. Lily.
They were at the booth by the window — our booth, the one I'd always asked for, the one with the cracked leather on the left side that the restaurant never got around to fixing. Lily was in the middle seat, her dark hair loose, talking with her hands the way she did when she was excited. Sienna was leaning toward her, patient and smiling, and I watched her lift Lily's plate and pick through it with a fork, pulling out bones one by one with the practiced ease of someone who had done it many times before.
Adrian sat across from them. He reached for the wine bottle and poured a glass for Sienna, and when he set it down his fingers grazed her wrist. He didn't pull back. He left his hand there for a moment, easy and unhurried, like it was the most natural place for it to be.
Lily grabbed Sienna's spoon and took a bite of her dessert. Sienna laughed and took the spoon back and ate the rest without hesitation, and Lily dissolved into giggles.
Adrian laughed.
I had never seen him laugh like that. Not in seven years. Not once.
For a moment I couldn't move. I just stood on the wet cobblestones in my grey coat and looked through the glass at the three of them, at the way they fit together, at the ease of it, the warmth, the total absence of any space where I might have stood.
Then Adrian's head turned slightly, just a degree, the way it does when something catches at the edge of your vision.
I stepped back.
I turned and walked.
---
I made it to the corner before my knees went. There was a flower shop there, buckets of white tulips out front, and I put my hand against the stone wall and my legs just — stopped cooperating. I bent forward, one hand on my knee, and breathed.
The shop owner appeared in the doorway. An older man, grey-bearded, who said something in French — *vous avez besoin d'aide, madame?*
I shook my head.
I straightened up. Took one breath, then another. The cold air helped. I focused on the tulips, on the specific white of them, on the fact that my feet were on solid ground.
I stood up straight.
I took out my phone.
Harold had been my family's solicitor since before I'd met Adrian. He was methodical and discreet and he'd once told me, at a dinner party I'd thrown for Adrian's publisher, that I was the most organized person he'd ever met. I'd laughed it off at the time. Now I was grateful for it.
I typed three words.
*Draft it.*
Sent.
I put the phone back in my pocket and stood there on the corner of Rose Street for another moment, looking at nothing in particular.
The last page, I thought. He'd spent seven years writing a book about quiet. About the things that go unsaid. About the spaces between people.
And I finally understood.
I was the last page. The one he'd already decided to tear out.
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