The day I lost Claire, the house looked the same but felt unfamiliar, like it had forgotten the rhythm of our life. Sunlight still poured through the living room window, warming the rug and landing on her favorite chair. But the light didn’t comfort me. It just highlighted what was missing.
I stood in the doorway, staring at that chair, thinking about how quickly an entire world can tilt. In the days that followed, I focused on practical things because they were easier to hold than feelings. Calls. Paperwork. Conversations that sounded distant, as if someone else were answering for me.
And then, while sorting through her belongings for estate planning and inheritance paperwork, I found something that didn’t belong in the life I thought we’d lived. A divorce decree with my name on it, signed and dated more than twenty years earlier.
For a moment, I truly believed it had to be a mistake.
Claire and I had built a home. We had raised two children. We had celebrated anniversaries. We had sat on the couch late at night, sharing tea and trading jokes that only made sense to us. We were the couple friends described as “solid.” Not perfect, but steady.
Yet there it was in black and white, a legal document that said our marriage ended long ago.
I sat down hard on the edge of the bed, the paper trembling in my hands. My brain tried to reject it the way the body rejects something it cannot process. I read it again. Then again. Each time, the words stayed the same.
Divorce decree.
Judge’s signature.
Claire’s signature, graceful and familiar.
My signature, tight and uneven.
I traced her name with my fingertip, as if the ink might unlock a memory I’d misplaced.
“Claire,” I whispered into the quiet room, “what did we do?”
