A month after our twenty-fifth anniversary, Jane looked at me across the breakfast table.
“Kevin,” she said, “I don’t know who I am anymore.” She blinked rapidly and fiddled with her faux pearl necklace. “I feel lost. I—I need something different.”
Recently, she’d told me she’d been trading late-night messages with Jerry, a man ten years her junior, whom she’d met on a dating site. Middle age had softened the contours of her petite figure, and she worried about her fading attractiveness.
“Jerry makes me feel alive again,” she said.
I stared at my buttered toast.
“I decided to move out at the end of the month,” she said, wringing her hands.
Jane’s words shocked and saddened me. We’d often talked about our love for each other. She would proudly show visitors photos of us smiling and hugging, one photo for each year we’d been together. I tried to dissuade her, but eventually resigned myself to the new reality.
*
During the following week, Jane packed items into cardboard boxes but didn’t seal them immediately. I noticed she packed my grandfather’s miniature, hand-crafted wooden angel, an heirloom I cherished.
While Jane was at the hairdresser, I searched her open boxes, my hands trembling, until I found the angel. Its cherrywood wings arched gently behind its tiny back. My grandfather, my favorite family member, had carved the angel for me during a winter in Nova Scotia. I also found and removed an antique sterling silver bell with intricate designs that Jane’s great-grandmother had owned. Jane had told me it reminded her of Christmas during her childhood.
I hid both the angel and the bell until Jane moved out.
Two weeks later, she called, her voice casual. “Kevin, I forgot to take the silver bell that belonged to my great-grandmother. You know how precious it is to me. Can I come over and pick it up?”
I furrowed my brow and scratched the back of my head. “I’ll give it to you if you return the angel my grandfather carved,” I said in a calm voice.
She cleared her throat. “I … I’ll look for it.”
Jane never asked for her heirloom again.
*
The silver bell and wooden angel rest side by side on my marble mantelpiece, silent witnesses to a faded love.
Clive Aaron Gill’s stories and poems have been widely published in literary magazines and anthologies. He has shared his tales and engaged audiences at writers’ workshops and at public and private events. Having lived and worked in Southern Africa, North America, and Europe, Clive’s diverse experiences infuse his storytelling with a rich global perspective. He holds a degree in Economics from the University of California, Los Angeles and lives in San Diego.
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