When the doctor told Daniel that there was nothing more they could do, the room seemed to shrink around him. The walls of the hospice suite felt closer than they had moments before, as if the air itself had decided to press in on his chest. Eleanor lay in the narrow bed by the window, her breathing shallow but steady, her silver hair fanned neatly across the pillow the way she had always insisted it be. Even now, she cared about small things. Daniel sat beside her, holding her hand, tracing the faint blue lines beneath her thin skin. They had been married for forty-two years.
Long enough that silence between them had become a language of its own. Long enough that he thought he knew every story she carried. Outside, the late afternoon sun filtered through the blinds, casting pale stripes across the blanket. Eleanor turned her head slowly toward him, her eyes clearer than they had been in days. “Daniel,” she said, her voice barely above a whisper. He leaned closer, thinking she might be asking for water or relief from the pain. Instead, she looked at him with an intensity that startled him, as if she were seeing him not as the man who had shared her life, but as someone she needed to tell the truth to before time ran out.