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The Polaroid He Burned Wasn't the Last One Novel Cover

The Polaroid He Burned Wasn't the Last One

I let my husband sleep with his ex to "save his son." I cooked her meals. I smiled at her growing belly. I told myself love was sacrifice. Then I found the vasectomy paperwork. Dated six months ago. Before the diagnosis. Before the excuse. He never planned to give me a child. He just needed me compliant while he rebuilt his first family — inside our home. I'm done being the wife. The man next door has been watching me survive. He's done watching. So am I.
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Chapter 4

I found it at 11:47 PM.

The primer had dried. The room smelled like nothing. I was sitting on the edge of the bare mattress I'd dragged back in to cover the drop cloth, and I had the vasectomy consent form in my hands — I'd gone back for it after Elliot and Delia went to bed, slid the drawer open in the dark, taken it to the bathroom, photographed every page under the vanity light, and returned it to its exact position before I let myself breathe again.

Now I was looking at the date.

I opened my phone's notes app. Typed the number. Then I opened the calendar — the shared one, the one Elliot and I had used for three years to coordinate everything from dentist appointments to dinner reservations — and I scrolled back.

I didn't have to scroll far.

The procedure date was a Tuesday. A Tuesday in March, eight months after our wedding. And on that same Tuesday, in my own handwriting, in the shared calendar we both could see: *E birthday dinner — Chez Nous, 7:30. Don't be late.*

I stared at that entry for a long time.

I had booked the restaurant six weeks in advance. I had driven to the watch shop on Magazine Street twice — once to look, once to buy — because I wanted to see it in person before I committed. I had worn the navy dress, the one he'd pointed to in a shop window once and said *that's your color* in that offhand way he had, the way that always made me feel seen. I'd stood in front of the mirror for twenty minutes deciding whether to put my hair up.

He had texted me at four in the afternoon.

*Something came up at the office. Rain check? I'm sorry, I'll make it up to you.*

I had eaten at the restaurant alone. I had told the waiter it was fine, my husband got held up, these things happen. I had taken the watch home in its little box and put it in the closet and not looked at it again for two weeks.

I opened the notes app again.

I typed the procedure date. Then, below it, I typed the date Liam was diagnosed — fourteen months later, a fact I knew because Elliot had told me the story so many times, the exact sequence of it, the specialist visits and the bloodwork and the long terrible wait. I had memorized it the way you memorize the details of something that matters to someone you love.

I put a minus sign between the two numbers.

Six months.

I read it again. *-6 months.*

He had done it six months before Liam was ever diagnosed. Six months before there was a sick child to protect, a reason to give, a story that made the math feel like sacrifice instead of what it actually was.

I set the phone down on the mattress.

The room was very quiet. The primer smell was fading. Through the wall I could hear the low, even sound of the house at rest — the hum of the refrigerator downstairs, the distant click of the heating system, the particular silence of two people sleeping in the room at the end of the hall.

I sat with it.

Not the anger — the anger was there, but it was clean and cold and I knew what to do with it. What I sat with was the other thing. The specific, nauseating clarity of watching every memory you have of yourself rearrange into something else. Every dinner. Every conversation about the future, about children, about *when the time is right.* Every morning I had woken up and believed I was inside a marriage that was difficult but real.

He had been so careful. That was the part that kept surfacing. Not careless, not reckless — *careful.* The kind of careful that requires planning. The kind that requires you to look at the person across the table from you and decide, deliberately, that they don't get to know.

I picked up the phone again.

I went back to the photographs. Checked the image quality on each one. Then I opened a new note and started a list. Not an emotional list. A practical one.

Family law attorney. Financial records — joint accounts, the investment account, the house deed. Elliot's business accounts, which I had signatory access to and had never used because I hadn't needed to. The prenuptial agreement, which was in the fireproof box in the closet, and which I had signed without a lawyer because I had trusted him and because I had been twenty-nine and in love and those two things had felt like enough.

I typed for a while.

When I was done I read the list back. Then I closed the app, put the phone face-down on the mattress, and picked up the roller.

The second coat went on faster than the first.

---

Elliot was already at the kitchen table when I came down in the morning. He looked up with that expression — the careful one, the calibrated one — and then something in it shifted. Loosened slightly.

"You seem better," he said. "I was worried about you."

I crossed to the coffee maker. Poured two cups. Carried his to the table and set it in front of him.

"I slept great," I said. I smiled. "I think I just needed to accept things."

He wrapped both hands around the mug. His shoulders dropped a fraction of an inch — that same small exhale I'd seen in the doorway of the green room, the relief of a man who had braced for impact and felt it pass.

"I'm glad," he said. Quietly. Like he meant it.

I turned back to the counter and picked up my own coffee.

"Me too," I said.

---

The backyard was cold.

I went out after Elliot left for work, just to stand in the air for a minute, to be somewhere that didn't smell like primer or butter or the specific domestic warmth of a house I was already beginning to think of in the past tense.

The oak at the back fence had dropped most of its leaves. They were piled against the base of the wooden slats, brown and soft from the rain earlier in the week. Across the fence, in the narrow yard of the house next door, I could hear the clean, rhythmic sound of shears.

Cade Mercer was trimming the hedge that ran along our shared property line. He was working from his side, methodical, moving along the row with the focus of someone who did things properly. I had spoken to him maybe a dozen times in the two years since he'd moved in — enough to know he was quiet in the way that meant something, not in the way that meant nothing.

He looked up when I stepped off the back porch.

Our eyes met through the gap in the fence slats.

I hadn't planned to say anything. I'd come outside to be alone with the cold air and the list in my head and the six-month gap that I was still, somewhere underneath the practicality, trying to absorb.

But Cade spoke first.

"You need to borrow a tool," he said, "or you need to borrow me?"

It wasn't a joke exactly. It wasn't flirtatious exactly. It was just — direct. The way someone speaks when they've been watching a situation from a distance long enough to have an opinion about it.

I stood there for two seconds.

The cold air moved through the yard. Somewhere down the block, a dog was barking at something it would never catch.

"The latter," I said.

It was the first true thing I had said out loud in days. Maybe longer. And the sound of it — honest, unguarded, landing in the cold morning air between us — felt like the first breath after a very long time underwater.

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