“You lied about this one.”
“You looked ashamed when I noticed you were cold, Damon. That was the first honest thing I saw on your face.”
I covered my mouth. “Why would she keep all this?”
“Because she knew you were keeping score too,” Mr. Carson said.
I looked up. “So this was punishment?”
“No. She was clear about that.”
He handed me an envelope. “Read it.”
“So this was punishment?”
I opened it with shaking hands.
“Damon,
You probably think I left you with nothing. I left you with the truth because it’s the one thing you cannot sell.
I knew why you married me. I knew before the courthouse. I knew when you smiled too hard at my neighbors and watched my medicine bottles stack up.
And yes, I knew about the message: “All good. Once she’s gone, I’m set.”
I kept it so you could see what fear made you willing to become.
“I left you with the truth.”
But I saw more than that.
You fixed Mrs. Alvarez’s porch rail and refused her money. You sat through my appointments, even when hospitals made you restless. You made terrible tea when my hands shook too badly to hold the kettle.
You weren’t good to me, Damon. Not fully. Not honestly.
But you weren’t empty. That’s why I stayed married to you. I needed a remedy for my loneliness, and you needed someone to take care of you.
But not like this.
“You weren’t good to me, Damon.”
So choose.
Take this box and disappear, or stand in front of the people who loved me and tell the truth.
I’m not asking them to forgive you. I’m asking you to stop lying.