She just disconnected the call and put the phone on the table.
Darius didn’t call again.
February brought news from Shauna.
Her friend called one evening, excited and joyful.
“Kiki, listen. Remember my cousin Tammy? She’s a realtor. Well, she says they’ve listed your old street’s two‑bedroom condo. Darius and his mother are trying to sell her apartment and split up. Couldn’t live together, apparently.”
Kiana burst out laughing.
“Seriously?”
“Absolutely. Tammy says they’re demanding a crazy high price, but no one’s buying. The condo is old. The building’s shaky. So they’re still sitting there arguing.”
Kiana shook her head.
So they hadn’t been able to coexist after all.
Greed and mutual blame had done their work.
“Well, let them,” she said calmly. “I don’t care.”
And it was true.
She really didn’t care.
Darius and Ms. Sterling were in the past, and she didn’t want to stir up that past.
Spring came surprisingly early that year.
By March, streams were running along the curbs, the first grass was greening, and buds were opening on the trees lining her street.
Kiana went to work with a light heart, met Michael for coffee or walks, studied English, and read books.
Life was improving.
Not immediately, not all at once, but gradually.
Day by day, she learned to wake up without anxiety and fall asleep without heavy thoughts.
She learned to find joy in small things—a morning cup of coffee, a good book, the warm spring wind blowing through an open window.
In April, the kitchen renovation was finally finished.