
When Lina Vale Became Elena Valenti Again
Chapter 2
That afternoon, I went to the building management office and removed my fingerprint from the access system.
The property manager looked nervous. "Mrs. Hayes, are you sure? It’ll be inconvenient if you need to come back in."
"I’m not Mrs. Hayes," I said. Julian and I had never married. He always said marriage could wait until his career settled. His career settled years ago; I was the one he left hanging.
The manager cleared his throat. "Sorry, Miss Vale. Should I delete it?"
"Delete it. I won’t need it anymore."
Back upstairs, I dragged two cardboard boxes from storage and started packing.
The Manhattan river-view condo was clean, bright, and expensive. Julian liked to say he had bought it after making captain, proof of the life we had built together. He didn’t know a Valenti offshore account had quietly covered the gap when his mortgage approval almost fell through.
I never told him. At the time, I thought protecting his pride was love.
There wasn’t much of me in the apartment. Most of the walk-in closet belonged to him: uniforms, suits, polished shoes, gym gear. My side held plain coats, simple dresses, and a few flight attendant uniforms.
The couture gowns, diamond earrings, and bulletproof watch my father sent over the years were locked in the deepest cabinet, untouched. Lina Vale had no reason to wear diamonds. Elena Valenti had been asleep.
On the nightstand sat a small model airplane from Julian’s first international route. He had tossed it to me and said he was too busy to buy a real gift. I had dusted it like treasure.
When I picked it up, a photo slipped out from underneath. Julian had just made captain in it, grinning like the world had finally noticed him. I stood beside him in a cheap black dress, looking at him as if he were my whole future.
I dropped the photo into the trash and put the model back where it was.
At dusk, his message arrived.
[Landed. At the hotel.]
In the past, I would ask if he was tired, whether the bed was decent, whether he had eaten. That night, I replied with one word.
[Okay.]
Half an hour later, he tried again.
[Milan’s cold. Want anything from duty-free?]
I was packing my toiletries. [No.]
[Weren’t you always talking about that serum?]
[Don’t want it anymore.]
He stopped replying. Maybe he thought I was being dramatic. Maybe he was busy with the woman he’d saved in his phone as a little bear.
I opened Clara Monroe’s social feed. Her newest post had gone up ten minutes earlier. It showed a night street in Milan, a glass of mulled wine, and a man’s hand resting beside it. On the middle finger was a faint scar. Julian cut that finger years ago while slicing fruit. I changed the bandage for a week.
Clara’s caption read, [Milan wind bites hard, but warm wine and good company fix almost anything. Best trips are the ones where someone looks after you.]
A pilot commented, [Captain Hayes treating you right again?]
Clara replied with a shy emoji.
I closed the app.
The sharp ache that should have followed didn’t come. It had dulled into something worse, something flat and dead. Julian wasn’t clueless. He wasn’t bad at romance. He had simply spent it all on someone else.
The next evening, he came home with a black shopping bag in his hand while I was sitting on the sofa. The dining table was empty. He noticed at once. "No dinner?"
"I ate."
His frown deepened. "I flew ten hours and came home to nothing?"
"There’s DoorDash."
He dropped the shopping bag onto the coffee table. "Lina, what the hell is this attitude?"
"Is that for me?"
He glanced at the bag, then away. "Someone asked me to bring it. I’ll get yours later."
"Clara asked?"
His face hardened. "You went through my phone?"
"Her feed is public."
Relief flickered across his face, then irritation rushed in to cover it. "She helped me at work. I brought her a gift. Big deal. You’re really going to act jealous over a coworker?"
"I didn’t say anything."
"You don’t have to. That ice-princess face says enough." He tore off his tie, tired and angry now that I had stopped being convenient. "I work with her. I have to keep things smooth. Is that so hard to understand?"
"You’re keeping things very smooth."
I stood to leave, but his voice snapped behind me. "Lina. I’m exhausted. Don’t make me come home and deal with this crap too."
This crap. Eight years of waiting, forgiving, swallowing questions, and making his life soft around the edges had become crap.
I went into the guest room and shut the door. "Sleep well, Captain."