In the weeks after Daniel left, the house felt both quieter and more honest. Saturday mornings still smelled like cinnamon, but now it was just Talia and me at the stove, measuring vanilla with careful, serious concentration. Sometimes she asked about Benjamin. I told her the truth in pieces she could hold: he was safe, he was loved, and none of this was her fault.
At the hospital, Gwen and I built an uneasy truce around the tiny boy who hadn’t asked for any of this. I didn’t forgive her, but I refused to let Benjamin become a weapon in Daniel’s war of cowardice. Papers were filed. Boundaries were drawn. When Cora called, I let it ring. I chose, again and again, to protect the children first. Betrayal had rewritten my life, but it also drew a brutal, necessary line: the moment you ask a child to carry your secret, you no longer belong in the home you shattered.