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Fallen - Part-time Wife

She left the plate in the rack. She took the check, folded it once, and put it in her pocket. Then she walked out the front door, leaving the key on the mat. For the first time in eighteen months, she had no schedule. No one to cook for. No side of the bed to keep warm.

She looked at the check. It was generous. It was also an ending she hadn't prepared for. fallen part-time wife

Three days a week, she wore a soft cardigan and cooked dinners that smelled like rosemary and regret. She listened to his stories about the office, nodding in the right places. She even slept over on Thursdays, lying on the left side of the bed, her back to his gentle, undemanding hands. She left the plate in the rack

But today, she was scrubbing the plate because he wasn't here. He had left a note on the counter, written on a torn piece of receipt paper: "Met someone. Real. Don't need the help anymore. Last check is on the table." For the first time in eighteen months, she had no schedule

She was free. And she had never felt more like a ghost.

She called herself his "part-time wife." It had started as a joke. After the divorce, she didn't want the weight of a full husband—the lawn to mow, the in-laws for holidays, the slow suffocation of shared laundry. But she missed the edges of it. The ritual. So she found him. A widower who didn't want to date, just wanted someone to fold his sweaters and remember to buy milk.

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