
The Moon Shines Bright as Home
Chapter 1
Carl was giving me the silent treatment again, and he hadn't lifted a finger to apologize.
Four years into our marriage, here we were once more. The reason? I’d accidentally scorched the cuff of one of his white dress shirts while ironing.
The burn was tiny—you’d have to look closely to even see it.
But without a word, he changed clothes, slammed the door behind him, and blocked me on every platform.
He checked into a hotel near his office, using silence as a punishment—a tactic I knew all too well.
I pulled out pen and paper, ready, as I had done countless times before, to write my letter of apology.
But this time, I didn’t want to say I was sorry.
I crumpled the half-written letter into a ball, tossed it into the trash, and went straight to his office.
When I reached his door, I saw him there, half-crouched in front of a young woman.
She was crying. Carl held a tissue, dabbing at her tears with an awkward, painstaking gentleness.
“Amy, please don’t cry. It’s my fault. Just… don’t give me the silent treatment anymore, okay?”
So it wasn’t that he didn’t know how to humble himself. It wasn’t that he was born unable to offer comfort.
He just… didn’t want to offer it to me.
…
I stood frozen. My hands and feet went numb, as if I’d become the punchline of some cruel joke.
The thermal lunchbox in my hand still held the soup I’d spent all morning making for him, just before leaving.
I’d worried he wouldn’t eat properly at the hotel, that his stomach issues would flare up again.
Now it all felt so pointless.
I recognized the girl inside. Amy. Carl’s new intern assistant.
Young. Pretty. She had big, innocent-looking eyes that turned timid whenever they met yours.
I’d seen her a few times. Carl had brought her to a business gala, introducing her only as his new assistant—“very bright,” he’d said.
I hadn’t thought much of it then. I was confident in my background, my education, my looks. Confident in the “well-matched” foundation of our marriage of convenience.
I’d assumed a girl like Amy was just a passing fancy for Carl.
Now I understood exactly how wrong I’d been.
I turned and walked away without a sound.
The elevator doors slid shut, reflecting my shattered face back at me.
So that was it. My four-year marriage, everything I’d so carefully tended, had been nothing but a charade I was performing for myself alone.
Back at the cold villa Carl called “home,” the first thing I did was pull the dusty wooden box from the very bottom of my nightstand drawer.
Inside were all the apology letters I’d written to him over these four years.
The first one was because I’d caught a fever during our honeymoon, delaying his ski trip.
Sick and weak, I’d written page after page, berating myself for falling ill at such an important time.
The second was because his mother criticized the birthday gift I’d prepared for his parents.
Carl said nothing, giving me the silent treatment for two whole weeks.
In the end, I wrote another apology, admitting I hadn’t thought things through—just to earn a cold “Hmm” from him.
…
The most recent one was from last month.
Because he was out drinking with friends late at night, and I’d dared to ask who he was with.
He took it as me checking up on him, as a sign of distrust.
I wrote: *I shouldn’t have overstepped into your personal space. Trust is the most important thing between husband and wife. I was wrong.*
Looking back now, every single letter, every single word, felt like a stinging slap across my face.
I, Patricia, with a master’s in finance from A University, was once a star in my own right.
My suitors could have lined up from campus to the city gates. Yet I chose Carl.
Because he said, “Patricia, you’re smart. You’re quiet. We’re a good match.”
I thought “a good match” was the best foundation for a marriage.
I thought he was just cold by nature, the same with everyone.
I thought if I tried hard enough, if I was obedient enough, I could warm that heart of stone.
I was wrong.
His heart was never stone. Its warmth was simply never meant for me.
One by one, I took the apology letters out of the box and spread them across the floor.
Black ink on white paper—a record of all my humility and foolishness.
I looked at them from afternoon until dusk.
Then, I called Amy out to meet me.
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