“I’m just not in the headspace for any more heavy stuff right now,” she said, after I told her my husband had left me and a doctor had just diagnosed me with MS.
My best friend of twenty years told me I was too negative. A downer.
For two decades, I was her unpaid, on-call therapist. I was the one who answered the 2 a.m. phone calls about bad dates, bailed her out of trouble, and talked her off countless self-made ledges. My life was the stable ground she stood on while she set fire to her own.
She assumed that service was guaranteed for life. A bottomless well of support she could draw from forever, without ever having to put a single drop back in.
She thought our friendship was a free ride, but she never imagined the day would come when I’d finally hand her the bill—with every last favor and late-night call itemized—due in full, at the exact moment she had nothing left to pay it with.
The Unpaid Bill: The 2:17 A.M. Call
The blue light of my phone is a harsh little ghost in the dark bedroom. It’s 2:17 a.m. on a Tuesday, and Jessica is crying so hard I can hear the wet catch in her throat.
“He just has this… this energy,” she says, the words hiccuping out of her. “And his profile said he was six-one, Karen. Six-one. He was five-ten, tops. It’s the principle of the thing. It’s a lie. The entire foundation is a lie.”
I make a low, sympathetic noise. My husband, Mark, rolls over with the tectonic groan of a man whose sleep has been murdered. He yanks his pillow over his head, a gesture I know as well as my own reflection.
“You deserve someone who’s honest from the very beginning,” I say. My voice is a smooth, practiced murmur. It’s my ‘Jessica voice.’ I’ve been using it since college.
On the other end, 300 miles away, Jessica’s sobs begin to subside, replaced by the hot hiss of indignation. “Exactly! It’s about respect. I give so much, you know? I’m a giver. And to be treated like my time isn’t valuable…”
I glance at the clock. 2:24 a.m. I have a 9 a.m. deadline, editing a technical manual for a company that makes industrial-grade conveyor belts. It’s soul-crushingly dull work, but it pays the bills. It requires a level of detail-oriented focus that is currently being siphoned out of my brain and poured into validating a grown woman’s outrage over a two-inch discrepancy on a dating app. For the third time this month.
A faint tingling starts in my right hand, a pins-and-needles sensation that’s been visiting more frequently lately. I flex my fingers, trying to shake it out. Probably just the way I’m holding the phone.
“He doesn’t see your worth, Jess,” I say, the words on autopilot.
“No,” she agrees, her voice firming up now. “He really doesn’t.” The crisis has been downgraded to a mere injustice. My work here is almost done. The call lasts another nineteen minutes.
A History of Fires
I try to fall back asleep, but my mind is buzzing. It’s like a fluorescent light that won’t stop humming. I keep thinking about the time, maybe ten years ago, when Jessica was desperate for a job at a high-end marketing firm. Her resume was… creative. Her references were a minefield of burned bridges.
She called me in a panic. “They want to speak to my last manager from the gallery. Karen, you know he hated me. He’ll tank me.”
“What do you want me to do, Jess?” I had asked, already knowing the answer.
“Could you just… be her? Just for one call? Her name was Susan Albright. She was British.”
And so I did. I spent an entire afternoon studying YouTube videos of Judi Dench interviews, practicing a posh, clipped accent. I sat by my phone, my heart hammering against my ribs, until the call came. For fifteen minutes, I became Susan Albright, lauding Jessica’s “proactive, out-of-the-box thinking” and “unflappable grace under pressure.” She got the job. She celebrated by taking a trip to Cancun with her new signing bonus. I celebrated by drinking a bottle of Pepto-Bismol to settle my roiling stomach.
She called it our “little caper.” I called it felony-adjacent. That was the dynamic. Her life was a fast-paced adventure movie, and I was her loyal, slightly terrified, behind-the-scenes crew. The one who rigs the explosions and makes sure the hero’s hair looks good. The one no one ever sees.
I roll over and look at Mark. His back is a rigid wall. We haven’t really talked in weeks. Not really. Our conversations have become a series of logistical check-ins about our daughter, Lily, or who’s taking out the recycling. The space between us in this bed feels wider than the 300 miles separating me from Jessica. The tingling in my hand is back.
The Note on the Kitchen Island
I must have drifted off, because the next thing I know, my alarm is chiming. It’s 6:30 a.m. Mark’s side of the bed is empty and cold. That’s not unusual; he often leaves for the gym before I’m up.
I shuffle into the kitchen, my body feeling heavy and used. The house is silent except for the low hum of the refrigerator. My daughter, Lily, is still asleep. She’s sixteen, and her ability to sleep through anything—including her mother’s late-night therapy sessions—is a superpower I deeply envy.
I go to the coffee maker, and that’s when I see it. A single sheet of paper from his legal pad, sitting squarely in the middle of our granite island. It’s weighted down by the salt shaker.
My heart does a strange little stutter-step. His handwriting is neat, clinical.
Karen,
I can’t do this anymore. It’s not one thing, it’s everything. It’s the silence. It’s the feeling that I am a distant second place in my own home. You have spent fifteen years with your energy focused on putting out Jessica’s fires, and there’s never been any left for us. I’m tired of being the quiet, understanding husband.
I’ve gone to stay at my brother’s. I’ll call about Lily later. Don’t call me.
Mark.
I read it twice. Then a third time. The words don’t seem to connect to my brain. It feels like I’m editing someone else’s horrible, badly written story. Second place in my own home. The phrase hangs in the air, glittering and sharp.
The coffee maker finishes its cycle with a final, pathetic gurgle. The kitchen smells like burnt coffee and the end of the world. My first coherent thought is a tidal wave of pure, uncut panic. My second thought, a reflex honed over two decades, is: I have to call Jessica.
The Shadow on the Scan
Two days pass in a blur of hollowed-out shock. I tell Lily that Dad is on a work trip, a lie so thin it’s transparent. She gives me a look that says she’s sixteen, not stupid, but she lets it go. The house is a museum of our life, every object a little artifact of a happiness I hadn’t even realized was gone.
The tingling in my hand has been joined by a strange, buzzing numbness in my left foot. I have an appointment with a neurologist that I made weeks ago, thinking it was a pinched nerve. Now it feels like a cruel joke on top of a catastrophe.
I sit on the crinkly paper of the examination table, my hospital gown gaping at the back. Dr. Evans is a kind-faced woman with tired eyes. She pulls up an image on her computer monitor. It’s a black-and-white scan of a brain. My brain. It’s dotted with small, ghostly white splotches, like someone spilled milk in the cosmos.
“These are what we call lesions,” she says, her voice soft. “They’re areas of inflammation where your immune system has been mistakenly attacking the protective covering on your nerves.”
She says a lot of other words. “Myelin sheath.” “Demyelination.” “Unpredictable.” Then she says the two words that land like stones in my stomach.
“Multiple Sclerosis.”
She hands me a pamphlet. The cover has a picture of a smiling woman hiking up a mountain. It feels like a mockery. My own personal mountain just erupted, burying me in ash.
I drive home, the pamphlet on the passenger seat next to the wedding ring I twisted off my finger an hour ago. My two new realities. An empty house and a body that has declared war on itself.
I sit on my bed, the same spot where I coached Jessica through her dating-app drama just a few nights ago. My turn. It’s my turn to be the one who needs help. I am entitled to this call. I’ve paid for it a thousand times over.
I find her name in my contacts and press the button. It rings once. Twice. Then the ringing stops, and Jessica’s voice, impossibly cheerful and pre-recorded, fills my ear.
“Hey, you’ve reached Jess! Can’t talk, living my best life in the city! You know what to do. Leave a message!” Beep.
Static on the Line: The Three-Hour Delay
I don’t leave a message. I can’t. The chipper command to “leave a message” after she’s announced she’s “living her best life” feels like a slap. I drop the phone onto the duvet as if it’s hot. For a long time, I just sit there, listening to the crushing silence of the house.
Hours crawl by. I hear Lily come home from school, her footsteps heavy on the stairs. She cracks open my door.
“Mom? You okay?”
“Just a headache, sweetie,” I lie, my voice muffled by my pillow. Another lie to add to the pile.
She lingers for a second, then her footsteps retreat. Later, the smell of burnt popcorn wafts up from the kitchen. The sound of some sitcom laughing track echoes faintly. Normal life is trying to happen in the rooms below me, but it can’t get through the door.
My phone buzzes on the bedspread. I grab it with a surge of desperate hope. It’s a text from Jessica.
3:42 PM: OMG so sorry, crazy day! Just seeing your missed call. Is everything ok?
I start to type a reply, my thumbs clumsy. Mark left me. No, too blunt. I have some bad news. No, too dramatic. As I’m trying to formulate the words, the three little dots appear. She’s typing. I wait, my breath held. The dots vanish. Nothing. Ten minutes pass. My phone buzzes again. A new text from her.
3:53 PM: Talk later? Gotta run, grabbing late lunch and mimosas with the girls! TTYL!
Mimosas. The word is so frivolous, so carefree, it feels like a personal insult. I stare at the screen, at the casual dismissal, and a feeling I can’t quite name—cold and heavy—begins to settle deep in my chest. It’s not anger yet. It’s the chilling precursor to it. It’s the realization that the emergency line I thought I had is actually just a party line, and I’m not invited.
Five Minutes for a Marriage
She finally calls me around nine that night. I’m sitting in the dark, watching the headlights of passing cars slice across the living room wall.
“Okay, I have like ten minutes before my show starts,” she says, her voice breathless and fast. “So, spill! What’s up? Your missed call seemed so mysterious.”
I take a breath. The air feels thick, hard to pull in. “Mark left me, Jess.”
There’s a beat of silence on the other end. I can hear the faint sound of a television. “Oh. Wow.” Another pause. “That sucks. I’m sorry.” Then, before I can even begin to unpack the continent of pain contained in those three words, she continues, her tone shifting from cursory sympathy to bright analysis.
“Honestly, Karen? You’re better off. I never told you this, but he was always so… beige. He had no edge. You need someone with a little more spark, you know? This is a good thing! A fresh start!”
I am speechless. She is re-framing the complete implosion of my fifteen-year marriage as a fabulous opportunity for self-improvement, as if my husband leaving was the emotional equivalent of a spa day.
“Anyway,” she says, the topic of my life’s greatest heartbreak apparently exhausted. “I am so glad I have you on the phone, because my new boss is a literal demon from the seventh circle of hell. She had the audacity to say my report was ‘sufficient.’ Not ‘excellent.’ Not even ‘good.’ Sufficient. Can you imagine the passive aggression?”
She launches into a five-minute monologue about her boss, her landlord, and a barista who gave her regular milk instead of almond. I listen, my mind floating somewhere above my body. I feel like an astronaut whose tether has been cut, watching the Earth—my old, familiar life—recede into the distance. She is talking at me, but the connection is gone. There’s nothing but static on the line.
Not in the Headspace
I wait for a pause in her torrent of workplace injustices. It feels like waiting for a gap in traffic to cross a busy highway. Finally, she takes a breath. I see my opening.
“Jess,” I say, cutting in. My voice sounds small and foreign to my own ears. “There’s… there’s something else. Something important.”
“Oh?” she says, the single syllable loaded with impatience.
I grip the phone tighter. My palms are sweating. “I went to the doctor. The tingling in my hand… it’s not a pinched nerve.” I say the words slowly, trying to keep my voice from trembling. “They did an MRI. They found lesions on my brain.”
The silence on the other end is different this time. It’s not thoughtful. It’s heavy, burdened. I hear her let out a long, theatrical sigh, the kind she uses when a waiter brings her the wrong kind of salad dressing.
“Oh, Karen,” she says, and her voice has changed completely. It’s gone from upbeat and self-absorbed to weary and put-upon. “Can we… can we not? Right now?”
I literally have no response to that. My brain short-circuits. Can we not?
She continues, her words tumbling out now, defensive. “It’s just… I’ve had such a stressful, draining week with this new boss, and my apartment stuff, and I’m just… I’m not really in the headspace for any more heavy stuff right now. It’s too much. Let’s just talk about something fun, okay? Tell me about Lily or something.”
Tell me about Lily or something. A polite, conversational request to shove my life-altering illness back into its box so she doesn’t have to look at it. So her evening isn’t spoiled by the ugliness of my reality.
“I have to go,” I whisper, and I hang up the phone before she can reply.
Living Her Best Life
I sit in the dark for what feels like hours. The phrase “not in the headspace” echoes in the silent room. It’s a corporate, wellness-culture phrase, a bloodless way of saying Your pain is inconvenient for me.
I think of the hundreds of hours, thousands probably, I’ve spent in the headspace for her. For her bad dates, her horrible bosses, her credit card debt, her fights with her mother, her existential dread about turning thirty, and then thirty-five, and then forty. My head has been a storage unit for her emotional baggage for twenty years. And the one time I show up with a single, heavy box of my own, I’m told there’s no room at the inn.
Unable to sleep, I mindlessly scroll through my phone, my thumb swiping up, up, up past pictures of other people’s happy, uncomplicated lives. And then I see it.
A new post from Jessica, uploaded twenty minutes ago.
It’s a photo. Her, and two other friends I vaguely recognize, are squeezed into a booth at some trendy, dimly lit bar. They are all laughing, heads thrown back, holding up jewel-toned cocktails in fancy glasses. Jessica is in the middle, her face glowing with happiness. She looks radiant. Unburdened.
The caption is a gut punch.
Needed this night out with my favorite people more than ever! Soaking up all the positive energy and leaving the drama behind. ✨ #GirlsNight #GoodVibesOnly #NoNegativity
I stare at the picture, at the hashtag #NoNegativity. I am the negativity. My divorce, my diagnosis. I am the drama she is leaving behind. My own reflection is a pale, ghostly shape on the dark screen of the phone, and for the first time in our entire friendship, I feel a hot, unfamiliar surge of pure, undiluted rage.
My phone buzzes in my hand, making me jump. A new text message notification lights up the screen. It’s from her.
11:18 PM: OMG you will not BELIEVE what just happened with my landlord. It’s a total nightmare. I need you. Can you call me ASAP?
The Cost of Negativity: The Oat Milk Catastrophe
I stare at the text message. I need you. The three most powerful words in Jessica’s arsenal. They are a summons, a command disguised as a plea. For twenty years, I have answered that summons without question.
My thumb hovers over the call button. A part of my brain, the old, deeply grooved part, screams at me to do it. It’s muscle memory. Jessica is in trouble. Karen fixes it. That is the law of our universe.
But another part of me, a new and unfamiliar part, is still staring at the ghost of that Instagram post in my mind’s eye. #NoNegativity.
Against my better judgment, fueled by a morbid curiosity I can’t explain, I press the button.
She answers on the first ring, her voice a frantic whisper. “Oh my god, Karen, thank you. I am losing my mind.”
“What happened, Jess?” I ask. My voice is flat. Devoid of the usual soothing tones.
“It’s the landlord. Remember I told you my faucet was dripping? Well, he sent his ‘super’ over, and the guy basically banged on it with a wrench for five minutes and now it’s making this horrible gurgling sound. It’s a complete disaster. It’s keeping me awake. I feel so unsafe.”
I say nothing. I listen to the sound of my own breathing. In the background of her call, I can hear the faint thump of dance music. She’s still at the bar.
“And,” she continues, her voice rising in pitch, sensing my lack of engagement, “that’s not even the worst part. The coffee shop on my corner, my regular place? They were out of oat milk this morning. My whole day, from the very beginning, has been a write-off. It’s like the universe is conspiring against me.”
A dripping faucet. A lack of oat milk. This is the “total nightmare” that required an ASAP call. A laugh, bitter and sharp, almost escapes my lips. I swallow it down. It tastes like acid.
“Wow,” I say. The single word is a block of ice.
“I know, right?” she says, missing the sarcasm entirely. “Anyway… what do you think I should do about the landlord?”
I look around my dark, silent living room. Mark’s favorite armchair is a shadowy lump in the corner. The pamphlet from the neurologist is still on the coffee table.
“I don’t know, Jessica,” I say. And for the first time, I mean it.
Talking to a Wall
She hangs up a few minutes later, clearly irritated. I can picture her perfectly, standing outside the bar, her designer coat pulled tight. I can see the frown on her face, the annoyance in her eyes. What is wrong with her? she’s thinking. She’s usually so much better at this.
I’m not performing my role. I’m not mirroring her outrage, not validating her victimhood, not offering a ten-point plan to combat the tyranny of her landlord. I’m just a dead line. A wall.
And I realize, with a sudden, shocking clarity, that this is the real crime in her eyes. It’s not that I have problems of my own; it’s that my problems are preventing me from adequately solving hers. My utility has been compromised. A hammer that won’t hit nails is just a useless piece of metal.
A friendship, to her, is a service. It’s a transaction. And I have just breached the terms of our unwritten contract. For two decades, I have been the most reliable emotional utility she has ever had, and tonight, there’s been a service outage.
The rage I felt earlier has cooled into something else. Something harder and heavier. It’s the grim, quiet clarity of understanding. I haven’t lost a friend. I’m just realizing I never had one. I had a job. And I just, effectively, tendered my resignation.
The Accusation
Two days pass in a haze of logistics. I call a divorce lawyer. I make an appointment for a follow-up with my neurologist. I tell Lily the truth, or a version of it. She takes it with a quiet maturity that breaks my heart. She holds my hand and says, “We’ll figure it out, Mom.” For a moment, our roles are reversed, and the simple comfort of it is overwhelming.
On the third day, Jessica calls me. Her tone is not apologetic. It’s the brisk, efficient tone of a manager about to deliver a poor performance review.
“We need to talk,” she says, no preamble.
“Okay,” I reply, bracing myself.
“I feel like you’ve been really distant lately,” she begins. “Ever since you called the other night. And that last call about my landlord was… bizarre. It was like talking to a brick wall.”
I wait. I know this is just the warm-up.
“Honestly, Karen,” she says, and here it comes. “It’s become a chore to talk to you. I’m walking on eggshells. You’re just so… negative now. Everything is doom and gloom. Every call we have is a total downer. I have a lot going on, and I need positivity in my life. I need my friends to lift me up, not drag me down.”
The words don’t hurt me. That’s the strangest part. They don’t land like blows. They land like puzzle pieces, snapping into a picture I’ve been staring at my whole life but couldn’t quite see.
She’s not wrong. I am negative right now. My husband left me. My body is betraying me. I am a walking, talking vortex of negativity. And she has a right to not want that in her life.
But the audacity of her complaint, the sheer, breathtaking entitlement of demanding a lifetime of one-way emotional support with no expectation of ever having to provide it herself… it’s magnificent in its narcissism.
“I understand,” I say, and my voice is steady.
“Good,” she says, relieved that I am seeing reason. “I’m glad you get it.”
The Emotional Ledger
After the call, I walk into my home office. It’s a small, neat room where I spend my days correcting other people’s grammar and syntax. I pull a fresh legal pad from my desk drawer—the same kind Mark used for his note—and a pen.
I don’t write down feelings. I write down facts.
The Bailed-Out Bar Tab – Atlantic City, 2018: $580.
The “Susan Albright” Manager Call – 2012: 4 hours of accent practice, 15 minutes of high-stakes lying.
The Late-Night Calls – Est. 2 per month for 20 years: 24 calls/year x 20 years = 480 calls. Average 45 mins/call = 360 hours.
I keep writing. The co-signed car loan she defaulted on, tanking my credit score for three years. The time I drove six hours round-trip to pick her up from a disastrous weekend getaway, missing my own anniversary dinner with Mark. He had been so quiet that night. Second place in my own home. The phrase doesn’t sting anymore. It’s just a fact.
The time I spent editing her resume for free, over and over. The money I’ve “loaned” her that was never paid back, which I now see was never a loan at all. It was a fee.
The list fills the entire page. It’s not a list of favors between friends. It’s a ledger. A detailed accounting of a debt so massive it could never be repaid. And I was the only one making deposits.
My phone buzzes on the desk beside the pad. It’s a text from Jessica. I read it, my new, cold clarity settling over me. She is trying to manage me, to put me on a shelf until I’m more palatable.
Hey. I just want to be honest. I was thinking about our chat, and your energy is really bringing me down right now. It’s not healthy for me. I think it’s best if we just take a break until you’re in a better place. Take care of yourself.
She has broken up with me. For my own good, of course.
The Final Transaction: A Different Kind of Circle
The community center basement smells like stale coffee and rain-damp coats. The lighting is a sickly fluorescent yellow, and the chairs are hard, unforgiving plastic. It’s the least glamorous place on earth, and for the past three weeks, it has become my sanctuary.
I sit in a circle with five other people. We are the Multiple Sclerosis Support Group of North Gate County.
A man named David, a retired postal worker with a tremor in his hands, talks about the crushing fatigue, describing it as “wearing a lead suit underwater.” A young woman named Maria, a graphic designer, shares a small victory: she was able to open a jar of pickles by herself for the first time in a month. Everyone nods. We all understand the monumental scale of that achievement.
No one tells anyone else their problems are a “downer.” No one sighs and says they’re not in the headspace for it. They just listen. The listening is an act of profound, shared humanity. It’s the opposite of the void I used to scream into on Jessica’s behalf.
Tonight, for the first time, I speak about more than just my symptoms.
“My best friend of twenty years… she sort of broke up with me,” I say, the words feeling clumsy. “She said I was too negative.”
A woman across from me, Sarah, who has a sharp sense of humor and walks with a cane, lets out a dry little laugh. “Oh, honey,” she says, not unkindly. “Welcome to the club. You find out who your real friends are when you get a disease that doesn’t have a fun-run or a pretty pink ribbon. This thing isn’t marketable.”
We all share a moment of dark, knowing laughter. It’s the most honest, relieving sound I’ve heard in months. Here, in this circle of strangers, I am not a burden. I am just a person. Understood.
The Unraveling
Weeks turn into a month. I unfollow Jessica on social media. It feels like blocking out a constant, irritating noise. But news still trickles through. A mutual acquaintance, another friend from college named Becca, calls me.
“Did you hear about Jessica?” she asks, a note of gossip-fueled glee in her voice.
“I haven’t really talked to her,” I say, which is the understatement of the century.
“She got fired!” Becca says. “Apparently she was late one too many times, and her boss just had enough. And then, get this, she called me, hysterical, asking if she could borrow like, two thousand dollars because her landlord is threatening to evict her.”
“What did you say?” I ask, a strange, clinical curiosity taking over.
“I told her I’d love to help but things are really tight right now,” Becca says breezily. “I mean, who has that kind of money just lying around? Plus, you know how she is.”
I do. I know exactly how she is.
I imagine Jessica, her carefully curated world of “good vibes only” crumbling around her. I picture her calling her new, fun, positive-energy friends. I can hear their polite evasions, their quick, shallow expressions of sympathy before they expertly change the subject to brunch plans or a new yoga class.
Her support system was a mile wide and an inch deep. And I was the inch. For the first time in her adult life, a real crisis has hit, a category-five hurricane, and she is discovering that her entire emergency response team consists of people who will offer thoughts and prayers from a safe distance. The fixer is gone. The emotional credit line has been cut off. The silence on the other end of her line must be deafening.
The Call She Answered
It happens on a Saturday afternoon. I’m in the kitchen, trying to teach myself how to cook a real meal again, something that doesn’t come from a box. The sun is streaming through the window, illuminating the dust motes dancing in the air. The house is quiet, but it’s a peaceful quiet now, not an empty one. Lily is at the library with friends. The space is mine.
My phone rings, vibrating on the countertop. I see her name flash on the screen, and my heart gives a painful lurch. It’s a phantom limb, that old instinct to answer, to soothe, to solve.
Part of me wants to press the red button. To just let it ring and disappear. But another part, the part that needs a final, formal ending, knows I have to answer. I can’t leave it as a “break.” It needs to be a clean cut.
I wipe my flour-dusted hands on my jeans and pick up the phone. I press the green button.
“Hello?”
“Karen? Oh my god, Karen, thank god you answered.” Her voice is a ragged mess of panic and tears. It’s the same voice from a hundred late-night calls, but this time, the desperation is real. It’s not about a man who lied about his height. This is the sound of a free fall.
“I didn’t know who else to call,” she sobs. “I got fired. My landlord is evicting me. I have no money. I’m going to be homeless, Karen. My life is over. I don’t know what to do.”
The old words, the familiar script, rises in my throat. I’m so sorry. That’s awful. How can I help? What do you need from me? The muscle memory is so strong, it’s a physical pull. I can feel the weight of her crisis trying to settle on my shoulders, a familiar, heavy cloak.
Two Simple Words
I let her talk. I let the entire, frantic, circular story pour out of her. The unfair boss, the evil landlord, the friends who have all suddenly gone silent. She’s the victim of a cruel and uncaring world. As she speaks, I find myself detaching from the emotion of it, listening to the structure. It’s the same story she has always told, just with higher stakes.
She finally runs out of air, her words dissolving into shuddering sobs. She’s waiting. Waiting for the magic words. Waiting for me to say, It’s okay, I’ll help you figure it out. You can stay with me. I’ll lend you the money. Waiting for me to fix it.
I take a deep, steadying breath. I look at my own two hands, covered in a light dusting of flour. I think of the pickle jar Maria opened. I think of the knowing laughter in the community center basement. I think of Lily’s quiet strength.
My anger is gone. My hurt is gone. All that’s left is a profound, unshakable calm. I am not her emotional caretaker anymore. I am not her bank. I am not her fixer.
“I’m sorry that’s happening to you, Jessica,” I say, and my voice is even and clear. It’s a tone she has never heard from me before.
She sniffles on the other end of the line, waiting for the rest. For the offer. For the solution.
It doesn’t come. The silence stretches, filled only by her ragged breathing.
I say the only two words that are left to say. The only two words that are true.
“Goodbye, Jessica.”
I press the red icon on the screen before she can respond. The call is over. Her name is still glowing there. I tap it, bringing up her contact details. I scroll down. My thumb hovers over the option at the very bottom.
Block this Caller.
A small pop-up appears, a final, bureaucratic checkpoint. Are you sure you want to block this contact?
With a single, deliberate tap, I press “Block.”
Her name vanishes. The screen goes back to my home page, bright and clean. It is finished. The sun is still streaming through my kitchen window