Marta stood up, walked to the shelf, and took down the notebook. She opened it to the last page they’d written on together—March 20th, the spring equinox. Sam’s handwriting: What I’m leaving behind: my fear of quiet mornings. What I hope will grow: patience. Hers: What I’m leaving behind: the need to be right. What I hope will grow: trust.
She turned to a fresh page. At the top, she wrote: November 7th. First snow. Unofficial change of season. change of season dates
Then, underneath: What I’m leaving behind: the idea that love has an expiration date stamped somewhere, if only I could find it. Marta stood up, walked to the shelf, and
She finished her tea. The snow was sticking now, turning the street into a postcard. She thought about Sam’s hands, the way he’d scrape ice off her windshield without being asked. She thought about how he’d said I love you the first time on a rainy April afternoon, the exact date lost to her now, which felt like a betrayal. What I hope will grow: patience
Outside, the world had turned white. Not a line drawn between fall and winter—just snow on red leaves, one season still bleeding into the next, refusing to choose a date. And Marta, for the first time in weeks, poured herself another cup of tea and watched it happen without checking her phone for an official announcement.
The truth was, there had been no single date for the end of them. No dramatic November 7th. It had been a slow rot, like October pretending to be summer one day and then biting cold the next. Small cruelties. Silences that stretched from hours into days. A Tuesday when he forgot to pick her up from work. A Thursday when she realized she hadn’t kissed him in a week. The final conversation happened on a Tuesday, but the relationship had ended sometime in August, during a heatwave, when they sat on the same couch without touching and watched a movie neither of them could name afterward.