Five Minutes After Elena Signed the Divorce Papers

ne years of marriage with a single steady line.

No thunder cracked outside the mediator’s office. No one shouted. No one slammed a fist onto the polished walnut table. The heater clicked. A clock ticked above a framed watercolor of Manhattan. Across from me, Ryan Mercer sat in a charcoal suit that still smelled faintly of cedar and expensive cologne, his tie loosened just enough to suggest weariness instead of guilt. He had perfected that look over the last year. He used it with clients, with neighbors, with pastors, with anyone willing to believe he was a good man trapped in unfortunate circumstances.