Part Five: The Corridor
He heard her before he saw her — the soft sound of movement in the corridor, the particular near-silence of someone who has learned to move through a house without disturbing it.
Emma appeared in the doorway of the sitting room, where Daniel had positioned himself in the wheelchair with the specific discomfort of a man who is pretending to need something he does not need and finding that the pretense has its own weight. She looked at him with the calm, level regard she always had — not the slightly averted quality that some staff produced, the careful management of eye contact that signals someone performing their role. Simply looked at him.
“If you allow me,” she said, “I can stay and help you tonight.”
He started to say what people say when they want to refuse an offer without causing offense — that she didn’t need to, that it wasn’t necessary, that arrangements had been made. He said: “You don’t have to do that, Emma. It’s not—”
“I know,” she said. “It’s not required.” She looked at him steadily. “I would like to, if you’ll allow it.”
There was a quality to the offer that was different from the ordinary execution of household duties — something in it that was, he recognized, a choice. She was making a choice, and the choice was visible in her expression, and he did not know what to do with that visibility.
“All right,” he said. “Thank you.”
She had prepared things he had not asked for and would not have known to ask for — a specific arrangement of the room that made navigation easier, a meal that was neither elaborate nor dismissive, the right temperature for the blanket that she had placed over his knees in the chair without comment. She worked without asking for acknowledgment, with the focused presence of someone who is giving their attention to the task rather than to the impression they are creating.
At some point in the evening he said something that he had not planned to say and that surprised him as he said it: “Do you ever find this work… limiting?”
She looked up from what she was doing. A pause — brief, considered. “I find it exactly what it is,” she said. “Most of the time, that’s enough.”
“Most of the time?”
The smallest thing crossed her expression. “There are days when it’s harder to remember why things matter,” she said. “But I think everyone has those days.”
He wanted to continue the conversation and did not know how to continue it without crossing the distance that five years of employer-employee relationship had created and that he was not certain, even now, should be crossed. So he said: “Thank you. For tonight.”
She nodded, and the moment passed into the ordinary texture of the evening.
Part Six: The Phone Call
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