CHAPTER 17
The Key on the Table
The house is breathing.
I am standing in the hallway. The bag is packed.
It sits by the front door, a dark shape against the pale moulding.
It contains three days of clothes, a toothbrush, a hairbrush, and a phone charger.
The essentials of survival. It does not contain the books I haven’t finished, the winter coat I bought last November, or the mug I use every morning—the one with the chip in the rim that Declan always promised to sand down but never did.
I am leaving those things. I am leaving everything that cannot be carried in a single trip.
I shouldn’t be lingering. The decision is made.
The execution should be surgical—swift, clean, severance without hesitation.
That is how I work. In the trauma bay, we do not pause to mourn the injury; we stabilise, we treat, we move.
But this is not a trauma bay. This is the rowhouse in South Boston where I have lived for three years, and the silence here is not the sterile silence of a hospital.
It is heavy. It is thick with the dust of the life we tried to build.
I drop the bag. Just for a moment.
I need to walk through the dark one last time. I need to make sure I’m not leaving anything behind that I will regret losing. Or maybe I just need to touch the walls to prove to myself that they were real, even if what they held was not.
I move into the living room. I don’t turn on the lamp.
I don’t need to. The streetlights from outside filter through the sheer curtains, casting long, warped parallelograms of orange light across the floorboards.
The floorboards creak under my socks. They have always creaked.
We used to laugh about it—how it was impossible to sneak up on each other, how the house announced every movement like a jealous sentry.
Now, the sound feels like an accusation. Going somewhere?
I run my hand along the bookshelves Declan built.
The wood is rough under my fingertips. He sanded them, but he was impatient, eager to get them up, eager to fill them.
If I press hard enough, I can feel the phantom grit of sawdust. They are slightly uneven.
The left side sits a fraction of an inch lower than the right.
When he finished them, he’d stood back, hands on his hips, covered in dust, and grinned.
“Adds character, Nora. Perfection is boring.”
I remember that Sunday. I remember the smell of the pine and the way the light hit the dust motes dancing in the air. I remember thinking that these shelves would hold our history. I thought they would hold baby books and family albums and the accumulating weight of a shared life.
Now, they just hold dust. And the silence of books that will never be read again by the same two people at the same time.
I trace the edge of the shelf. I can smell it still—the faint, chemical tang of polyurethane.
It smells like hope. It smells like a lie I was happy to believe.
I pull my hand away. The memory doesn’t hurt, exactly.
It feels like pressing on a bruise that has already yellowed—a dull, distant pressure where there used to be sharp pain.
I move to the kitchen.
This was my project. I painted these walls myself.
In the daylight, they are a soft, dusty blue—"Harbour Mist," the can had said.
Now, in the dark, they look grey. Colourless.
I remember the weight of the roller in my hand, the ache in my shoulder, the way the light hit the wet paint and made the room feel like it was underwater.
I remember the fight—Declan flicking water at me from the faucet, me lunging with the roller, both of us ending up on the floor in a tangle of limbs and laughter.
I remember how he looked at me that day. Like I was the only person in the world. Like he was happy to be trapped in this blue room with me forever.
I walk to the refrigerator. I open it.
The light is blinding, an aggressive, artificial white that stabs at my eyes. I blink, waiting for my pupils to adjust. The motor hums, louder now, a mechanical vibration that I can feel in the soles of my feet.
The shelves are a catalogue of a life interrupted.
There is a plastic container of leftover clam chowder from the place on Dorchester Avenue. He didn’t finish it. He said he was saving it for lunch tomorrow. He will wake up and look for it, and I won’t be here to tell him it’s behind the milk.
There are two of his beers. The bottles are sweating slightly in the cold air.
And there, on the middle shelf, pushed to the back: a litre of ginger ale.
I stare at it. I haven’t touched it in weeks.
I bought it when the nausea was so bad I couldn’t stand upright in the shower.
I bought it when we were still talking about names.
When we were still talking about nurseries.
It sits there, unopened, a plastic monument to a timeline that has been severed.
I reach out and touch the cold plastic of the bottle.
My fingerprint leaves a mark in the condensation.
I almost take it. I almost grab it and throw it in the trash, because the thought of him finding it, of him pouring it down the sink or, worse, drinking it without thinking, makes my stomach turn.
But I don't. I leave it. I close the refrigerator door. The darkness rushes back in, absolute and suffocating.
I turn away from the kitchen. The stairs are ahead of me.
I shouldn’t go up. The bag is down here. The door is down here. The car is outside. There is nothing upstairs that I need.
I go up anyway.
My feet know which treads to avoid. Skip the third step; it groans. Step on the edge of the seventh; it’s solid. I am a ghost in my own home, ascending into the silence.
The hallway upstairs is narrow. The air is warmer here, rising from the radiators.
It smells of him. It smells of the soap he uses—that clean, sharp scent that used to make me bury my face in his neck—and the faint, acrid ghost of smoke that clings to his gear.
It’s a smell that used to mean safety. It used to mean he came back. Now, it just smells like a lie.
The door to our bedroom is cracked open.
I stop.
I stand in the sliver of shadow outside the door frame. I don’t push it open further. I don’t need to. Through the gap, I can see the bed.
I can see him.
Declan is sleeping. He is lying on his back, the duvet kicked down to his waist because the room is too warm.
He is breathing deeply, a slow, rhythmic sound that I have fallen asleep to a thousand times.
One arm is flung out across the empty space where I should be.
His hand is open, fingers curled slightly, as if he is reaching for me even in his sleep.
He looks younger like this. The lines of exhaustion around his eyes are smoothed out.
The tension that he carries in his jaw—the tension of the firehouse, of the secrets, of the guilt—is gone.
He looks like the man who carried a mangled boy into my ER five years ago.
He looks like the man I trusted with the most fragile parts of myself.
If I walked in there, if I sat on the edge of the bed and touched his shoulder, he would wake up.
He would pull me down into the sheets. He would mumble, “Nora?” in that rough, sleep-heavy voice, and for ten seconds, everything would be okay.
For ten seconds, we would just be two people who love each other.
But then he would wake up fully. And I would remember the phone. I would remember the photos. I would remember the look on his face when he talked about the lightness.
I stare at his hand. That hand has held mine while we walked the harbour. It has held a hose fighting a three-alarm blaze. It has held the woman he told me not to worry about. It has held me while I cried on a bathroom floor.
I do not hate him. That would be easier.
If I hated him, I could storm in there and scream.
I could wake him up and tell him exactly how he broke me.
But I don’t want to scream. I am too tired to scream.
The space where my anger used to be is just empty now.
It’s a vast, hollow room where the lights have been turned off.
I watch him for one minute. I count the breaths. In. Out. In. Out.
Then I step back.
I move down the hall. Past the bathroom. Past the linen closet. To the door at the very end.
The nursery.
The door is closed. It has been closed for weeks. We don’t go in there. We don’t talk about it. It has become a void in the architecture of the house, a room that exists only in the past tense.
I stand in front of it. The wood is painted white, chipping slightly at the bottom.
I raise my hand. I place my palm flat against the wood.
It feels cold.
I don't open it. I don't need to see the yellow paint samples again. I don't need to see the rocking chair under the sheet or the dust motes dancing in the empty space where the crib should be. I said goodbye to that room yesterday. I sat on the floor and I let the ghost of the baby go.
He isn't in there. He never was.
I keep my hand on the wood for just a second longer. A final acknowledgment. Then I pull away.
I turn around. I walk back down the hall, past the bedroom where the man I loved is dreaming, past the life I thought I was living. I descend the stairs. I don’t skip the third step this time. Let it creak. Let the house wake up. It doesn’t matter anymore.
Back in the kitchen. The blue walls are waiting.
I walk to the table. It’s a sturdy oak table we bought at a flea market and refinished together. There are water rings on the surface. Scratches from silverware.
I reach into my pocket.
I pull out my house key. It’s on a simple silver ring. I hold it for a second. This piece of metal granted me access to safety. It was the promise that I had a place to go when the world was too loud and too sharp.
I place it on the table. It makes a sharp clack against the wood.