She Put Two Passports on the Divorce Desk. Then the Clinic Called-QuynhTranJP

The morning Adrian Castillo decided our children were disposable, the sky over downtown looked almost too clean for what was happening inside that office.

Sunlight slid down the glass towers across the street and landed on Attorney Bennett’s polished desk in bright rectangles.

The room smelled like lemon cleaner, warm printer toner, and the burnt coffee his assistant kept reheating in the little kitchen behind the copier.

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Adrian sat across from me in a navy suit I had helped him choose three years earlier for a charity dinner his mother insisted was important to the family name.

His sister Vanessa sat beside him in a cream blazer, tapping one manicured nail against her phone as if the end of my marriage were just a calendar item running late.

I kept both hands in my lap because if I put them on the desk, everyone would see how tightly I was holding myself together.

Noah and Lily were not there, but they were in every line of paper in that room.

Noah was seven, careful, observant, and old enough to understand when adults were speaking around a wound instead of naming it.

Lily was five, bright and softhearted, the kind of child who apologized to stuffed animals when they fell off the bed.

They were the two people Adrian dismissed without even looking embarrassed.

“If you want the children, take them. They’re nothing but dead weight while I build a new life.”

He said it with the tone he used when asking someone to remove an old sofa from a hallway.

Not cruel in the dramatic way people expect.

Careless.

That was worse.

Cruelty at least knows it is cutting something.

Carelessness walks through the blood and complains about the floor.

I had been married to Adrian for ten years, and for most of those years I confused endurance with loyalty.

I packed his lunches when he worked late.

I hosted dinners for Margaret when she wanted the Castillo family to look respectable.

I remembered Vanessa’s birthdays, sent flowers after her surgery, and let her borrow my black dress for a gala where she spent the entire night telling people I had no taste.

I gave that family the softest parts of myself and called it peace.

The thing about peace is that it only works when both sides stop firing.

The Castillos never stopped.

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