She was not wearing her work clothes. She had on a simple blue dress, the kind of thing a person wears for herself, not for a job. Her bag was over her shoulder. Her face was calm.
He went downstairs and opened the gate.
She looked at him.
“I would like to accept the offer,” she said. “The company, the training.” She paused. “I want to learn it properly from the beginning.”
He looked at her for a moment.
“Good,” he said simply and warmly. “Good.”
She came through the gate.
He made breakfast that morning himself. Not perfectly. The eggs were slightly more done than they should have been. The toast was a shade too dark. He put it on the table and looked at it critically.
“It’s fine,” Rebecca said, sitting down.
“It isn’t,” he said. “You’ve been making mine better for a month.”
She picked up her fork and ate without responding to that, but the corner of her mouth moved.
He sat across from her.
They ate together at the long dining table that had been set for 1 person for as long as either of them could remember: for him, 30 years; for her, her whole adult life. Morning light came through the tall windows. The clock ticked in the hallway.