my heads under water [i’m (not) breathing fine]
She may have settled into her new life very peaceably had it not been for the nagging notion in the back of her brain that he was to return. She knew that he was going to return eventually, she just hadn't expected it to make her so nervous. She'd made up her mind, she'd moved all of her things out of his house. She'd pulled her money, the money she'd meticulously kept track of by keeping every pay stub, every document for the last several years. She pulled out every penny that was hers from their checking and savings accounts. She'd started her own account, at a separate bank.
She'd left her cell phone, completely reset to its factory out-of-the-box settings and left it on the entry hall table. She'd gotten her phone with a brand new number. She didn't leave it for him, but she knew, in this small town, he'd find a way to get it. While each of her preparations had been made to create another degree of separation, it also would, she knew, create another degree of anger in her husband's breast. She'd met with an attorney and the formal separation required before a divorce had begun. She had a year.
A year of separation before she could file for a no-fault divorce, something she desperately wanted. So much could happen in that amount of time. Wringing her hands, she paced the length of the kitchen in her bare feet. Her white thighs partially covered in her Soffe shorts, remnants of her dancer days. No tights covered her skin now. The tight spaghetti strapped tank top was covered with a cropped and loose sweatshirt hung off of one shoulder and her long chestnut hair was swept back in a loose braid.
She spun on her toe, a perfectly placed spin, her head finding the same spot on the opposite wall. She paced the other way, turned again, this time adding a flare of her hand. Soon, she was stepping, the length of the kitchen, a warm up that she'd done since she was a girl and found comfort in the pacing as she'd grown. At some point, she'd moved to the living room, switched on some music and began stretching, way up over her head. She'd go through the positions next before trying out her more flexible poses. It had been some time since her body had moved and it caught in some places but always moved through. She dug in, mentally and pushed away the cobwebs and the worry, willing herself not to break. If her body could still do this after all this time, perhaps her spirit could follow.














