His Apathy, Her Freedom's Dawn
son
icia' s old social media posts, a pit forming in my stomach. Everyth
en up. There were blurry photos of a younger Axel, his arm around her, a genu
caught my eye. A photo of her on a pla
future. Even if it means sacrificing
What
nto so much trouble for me. His family... they were
ndship. It was something far deeper, far more entangled. She spoke o
red around a messy divorce. "My heart aches, not for what I lost, b
ding to Alicia's lament: "Don' t worry, your Axel is gettin
d. My Axel? Gett
r post from Alicia. "Free. But at what cost? He' s chose
ivorce. It was the exact sa
horror. I wasn't married to Axel because he loved me. I was a pawn. A condition. He married me so Alicia could get heThe convenient solution f
ed, cheap, discarded. Every grand gesture, every see
ys. I just walked. My legs moved on their own, carrying me through the unfamiliar
e out. I had nothing. No car, no wallet, no sens
eir faces illuminated by the streetlamps. Alicia glanced at me, a fleeting, almost impercep
her voice weak. "My
n to alarm. "Alicia? What's wrong? Are you alright
hispered, leaning into him. "All thi
tenderness, met mine for a brief, fleeting
. Don't worry about anything." He looked at me then, his expressio
t me. He just pulled Alicia closer, whispered assuranc
till pressed to her forehead, but her eyes, cold and
was a package, to be delivered. I stood there, the exhaust fumes sti
er. The driver Axel had promised never showed.
house. Laughter. His laughter. It echo
e was nestled against him, a blanket around her shoulders. He wa
said, not even turning his head a
ong here. Not anymore. I climbed the grand staircase
me. I sneezed, a weak, pathetic s
room, the sanctuary that was neve
forced calm of the house. He looked up, his