I never imagined that a quiet trail ride, chosen precisely because it promised calm and solitude, would become the moment that exposed a fracture I hadn’t known how deep it ran in our marriage. That morning, I had woken with a restlessness I couldn’t name, the kind that hums beneath the skin and refuses to settle until you move your body and your thoughts somewhere wide and open. The stable sat at the edge of town, bordered by tall pines and long, winding paths that disappeared into gentle hills. Riding had always been my way of finding stillness, of listening to my own breathing and the steady rhythm beneath me.
The horse I rode that day wasn’t mine; it belonged to a friend who worked at the stable and had offered it without ceremony, as though borrowing a living, breathing creature was as simple as borrowing a book. I accepted without much thought. As we moved along the trail, sunlight filtered through the leaves, scattering gold across the dirt path. At one point, something about the way the light fell felt worth capturing, so I stopped, lifted my phone, and snapped a photo.