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Two months after our divorce, I never imagined I would see her again — especially not in a place that reeked of disinfectant and quiet sorrow, where every second dragged and every face carried its own silent suffering. Yet there she was, sitting alone in a hospital hallway in northern California, wrapped in a thin, pale gown, her hands folded neatly in her lap as though she were trying to disappear into herself.
It was her.
Her name was Serena.
I’m Adrian. I’m thirty-five. And until that moment, I thought I had already finished paying the price for the choices I’d made.
We had been married nearly six years, living a simple life in Sacramento — nothing flashy, nothing dramatic, just the kind of shared existence built from grocery lists, small arguments over movie picks, and the way she stayed awake for me when I worked late, even when she pretended she hadn’t.
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