Over beans and cheap plastic cutlery, they spoke of Henry.
No one else had asked her what her husband had been like. They had mourned the loss, not the man.
“He remembered everything,” she said. “How people took their tea, what they said years ago, the names of their mothers. In a life where I was always the important one in the room, he made me feel like I could become less important in the best possible way.”
“And Olivia?” Richard asked.
Florence’s face changed.
“My daughter,” she said, “was going to be better than me at everything.”
She spoke of Olivia’s eye for buildings, of how she could walk down a street and see structural truths no one else noticed. She spoke again of the interview clothes, of the small human detail that somehow held the whole tragedy inside it.
The visits continued.
She ate more. Laughed more. Helped him organize his delivery receipts with ruthless efficiency. He kept extra water ready without admitting why. The second plastic chair became permanent.
But reality was gathering outside their small refuge.
One morning, Richard saw a headline on his cracked phone:
KINGSLEY GROUP IN CRISIS. WHERE IS FLORENCE KINGSLEY?
The article spoke of instability, investor concern, executive panic, a company drifting without its leader.
When Florence arrived that afternoon, Richard was waiting outside.
He showed her the article.
“I know,” she said.
“Are you reading the reports they send you?”
“A few.”
“Florence.”
It was the first time he said her name like that—plainly, directly, as someone speaking to a person rather than a title.
She looked up.
“The chair is not the solution,” he told her. “It’s a break from the problem.”
Her jaw tightened. “You don’t understand what it’s like to go back. You don’t understand that house. That office. Everywhere I look, there’s something missing.”
“I know I don’t understand that specific pain,” Richard said. “But I understand running.”
She went still.
“You’ve been running for five weeks,” he said, “and the pain is still exactly where you left it.”
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