He kept talking, like he had rehearsed it.
“The house is legally mine,” he said matter-of-factly. “I need room. I can’t deal with complications right now. It’s not good for me, and it’s not good for moving on. I think it would be best if you found somewhere else to stay.”
He didn’t hesitate. He didn’t stumble. He didn’t apologize.
I looked at him carefully. The costly suit. The polished shoes. The watch worth more than my car. The small crease between his brows, perfectly measured to make him seem wounded enough to earn sympathy without appearing truly broken. I remembered dinners at that very house—the one he now claimed completely—Laura laughing across the table, her eyes darting nervously between us whenever the mood turned tense.
A knot tightened in my chest. Maybe it was anger. Maybe it was grief sharpening into something colder. But it didn’t come out as shouting.
I smiled.
Just a small smile. Barely there. Not mocking. Not challenging. It wasn’t for him at all. It was for me—a quiet reminder that I still had some control over myself, even if so much else had been taken.
“I understand,” I said softly.
I didn’t argue. I didn’t remind him of the years I had lived there helping Laura. Of the nights I stayed behind with their son when they traveled. Of the money I had put in when he was still just a young man with ambition and empty pockets. I said nothing about the contracts, the meetings, the signatures, the sacrifices.
I simply nodded.
That evening, I returned to the house for the last time.
Without Laura, it felt hollow. As if her absence had emptied the walls themselves, leaving only furniture and photographs standing stiffly inside a place that no longer belonged to either of us. When I passed her room, the door stood half-open. I stopped, resting one hand on the frame, looking at the bed she had slept in as a teenager, now neatly made and untouched.
I could almost hear her voice again. “Dad, why do you always knock twice? I already told you to come in.”
I stepped inside and stood there in silence. Her perfume still lingered faintly in the air, mixed with detergent and the old-paper scent of books on the shelf. On the desk was a framed wedding photo of her and Daniel—her smile bright, his posture proud.
On the nightstand sat a smaller photograph: Laura at eight years old on my shoulders at the beach, her arms stretched wide like wings. I picked it up gently.
Later, in my room, I pulled out a small suitcase. I packed only essentials—clothes, socks, underwear, the sweater she once bought me because, as she joked, I needed “something respectable” for her business events. I added my documents, which I always kept neatly in a folder: my ID, bank papers, a few contracts.
Then I placed the old beach photograph on top.
Everything else—the furniture, the bookshelves, the worn armchair where I used to read while she and Daniel watched television, the kitchen tools I had bought when I first moved in to help with the baby—none of it mattered. It was just weight, and I had no interest in fighting over things.
I made the bed before leaving. Habit, I suppose. Then I went to the kitchen and set the house keys on the table. They made a small, sharp sound against the wood that echoed in the empty room.
At the front door, I stopped and looked around one last time. The house was dim, lit only by the small hallway lamp. Family photos lined the wall—Laura holding their son, Daniel smiling at the camera, the three of them beside a Christmas tree. In one or two of the older photos, I was there too, tucked off to the side like a supporting character.
“Goodbye, hija,” I whispered. “I hope… wherever you are, you don’t have to see this part.”