Shattered Expectations

Broken Expectations

William stood in the front room, clutching a velvet ring box so tightly that the corners pressed into his palm. In his head, he replayed his carefully prepared speech over and overeach word, each pause just so. Today had to be flawless. Perfect. Not a single misstep.

He drew a deep breath, struggling to calm the anxiety coiling in his chest, but his heart hammered on insistently just beneath his throat. He pictured how it would unfoldhow the box would open, how she would look at the ring, how

Just then, a familiar, soft voice called out from the hallway.

“Will, are you home?”

Startled, William stiffened. Time seemed to knot itself into a ball. Instinctively, he shoved the ring box into his jeans pocket, hurriedly wiping his sweaty hands on the fabric. The movements were abrupt, almost frantic.

“Coming,” he called, his voice gravelly and unmistakably tense. He coughed, trying to regain composure, then added, more evenly, “I just got in.”

He smiled gently as he drew near, greeting Charlotte with a soft kiss on the cheek. For a moment, her warmth and the subtle scent of her perfume distracted him from his nerves. But then he noticed the heavy-looking shopping bag in her hand, and a flicker of worry stirred in his chest.

“Charlotte, you know you shouldn’t be carrying that,” he chided softly, taking the bag from her. “You really shouldn’t be exerting yourself like this. You must think about your health.”

Charlotte simply chuckled, giving her head a little shake. Her sharp, searching gaze roved over his face. He could feel her noticing the nervous swallow, the faint tremor in his fingers as he set the bag down. Something was off, and she could tell.

“Is something the matter?” she asked, inclining her head. “You seem awfully on edge tonight.”

William shook his head a touch too quickly.

“No, nothing really,” he stammered, striving for steadiness. “Just something at workone of the projects is stalled. It’s under control, nothing to worry about, but its still uneasy. Must just be me.”

Realising he was rambling, he hurried to change tack and distract her.

“Are you hungry? Ive cooked us dinner, all your favourites. I thought it would be nicefor you to come home to a hot meal after work.”

His tone warmed as he spoke of suppera safe subject, familiar ground where he could relax. He even offered her a wider smile, hoping shed buy his feigned ease and wouldnt probe further.

“No, thank you, I popped into the café with a colleague earlier. But Id love a cup of tea. We have something to discuss.”

Charlottes words were calm and ordinary, but inside William everything lurched. Had she guessed? That thought darted through him, sending his pulse racing again. His palms were clammy as he forced himself to breathe, gesturing her ahead so he could have a moment to regain composure. Heaven help him if he started stammering or blushingor worse, said nothing at all. Hadnt he been preparing for so long?

They entered the kitchen. William busied himself filling the kettle, avoiding her eyes. His movements were uncoordinatedreaching for a cup, then putting it back, straightening the tablecloth as though it suddenly troubled him.

“Is it something important?” he managed at last, trying to sound nonchalant, though his voice pitched awkwardly and his words tumbled out hastily. “Or shall we have something a little stronger than tea?”

He even tried a faint smile, but it came out all wrong. Inside, nerves tightened further: What was on her mind? Why was she looking at him like that? Had she truly guessed?

“Tea will do,” Charlotte replied, settling at the table, her manner composed but her gaze steady. “We need a clear head for this conversation, I think.”

He froze, cup in hand. The quiet whistle of the kettle seemed to fill the kitchen with a deafening racket. Slowly, he put down the cup, turned to her, and breathed deeply, fighting the quiver in his hands. Everything would be decided now: either he would find the courageor

He didnt want to think about or.

There was a seriousness in Charlottes tonea careful weight to her pausesthat unnerved him. What did she want to say? Had she taken that job offer after all? The thought unsettled him. He pictured her going away for work more and more, seeing her less, her phone lighting up continually with messages from new colleagues No, he couldnt bear that.

“You know,” she began, voice wavering slightly as her gaze dropped to her teacup, “recently some things happened that made me rethink my life. What do I want for the future? Do I want to stay in this town forever? Do I want family, children? Am I happy at work? Ive thought long and hard. I want to change everything.”

She spoke softly, but her every word was edged with resolve. Charlotte was set on this, and, evidently, his own feelings were not her main concern. She watched him unwaveringly, as if to ensure he truly understood.

Williams throat instantly felt parched. He reached for his tea, taking a hasty gulpand grimaced. The tea hed just brewed now tasted unbearably bitter. He placed the cup carefully aside. Outwardly, he tried for calm: squared shoulders, steady gaze, lips pressed into a neutral line. But inside, his thoughts were in chaos.

“What do you mean?” he asked, striving to keep his voice from shaking. Not perfectlythere was that note of strainbut he immediately tried to reel himself in.

He watched her, trying to read her intent from her face, the movement of her eyes. Countless questions swam in his mind, but he dared not utter a single one.

Charlotte spoke in a low murmur, almost whispering as if the words cost her effort. She stared at the table as though searching the woodgrain for the right response, her hands turning a teaspoon over and overtwisting, setting it down, picking it up again. It was as if she was speaking more to the spoon than to William.

“Ive decided to change jobs, move to another city, find new friends and a new relationship. William, youre a decent man. Steady, clever, good-looking. But you cant give me what I truly want,” her voice faltered, yet she pressed on: “You make a steady living, have your own flat, a car. Youre satisfied, never want anything to change. But for me, its not enough, not nearly enough! I want to travel, to live in a grand house with a beautiful view out of every window. I want furs and gold!”

As he listened, something fractured within William with each word. He searched for signs of doubt in her voice, some hint that even she didnt believe herself. But she was gentle but resolute. He wanted to reply, to argue, to explainbut his mind blanked. Then, clinging for something to grasp, he latched onto a memory, almost absurdly:

“But you hate real fur,” he said, raising an eyebrow, striving for levity, all while confusion coloured his tone. “Remember that fur gilet I bought you years ago, and how you went berserk? Said the poor animals had suffered?”

He gave a short laugh recalling it. Charlotte had been furious, going on about the cruelty of the fur trade, how she would never wear such a thing. Hed apologized for ages, not quite understanding her anger then, but now it seemed almost a hopeful lifeboat in the middle of a storm. If she could flip so quickly on fur, maybe everything else was just a fleeting emotion?

Charlottes head snapped up, her eyes flashing with wounded pridealmost anger. This wasnt the reaction shed wanted. Shed rehearsed the words, steeled herself for the moment, and here William was, fixated on an ancient gilet.

“I was naive and foolish!” she spat, bitterness breaking through. “Is that all that matters to you? Nothing else?”

Her hands clenched and unclenched as she struggled to contain herself. She wanted him to understand the gravity of her decision, to react, to fight, to beg but his collected, uninterested face, that cocked eyebrow only fanned her frustration.

William shifted in his chair, getting comfortable in a ponderous, almost lazy way, as if there were nothing unusual here. His girlfriend was leavingso what? Was he supposed to cry over it?

“Not nothing,” he replied, in a near indifferent tone. “Just trying to make sense of it. Why today? And if you decided to break up, why did you bother buying groceries? Ive got two good hands; I can shop for myself.”

His words enraged her. How could he? Shed delivered such a blow to him, and he was worrying about the groceries?

Suddenly, Charlotte shot up, chair screeching back as it hit the wall. She stood tense, hands curled into fists, tears or fury brightening her eyes.

“You heartless brute!” she shouted, voice trembling with a mix of hurt and irritation. “Why today? Its simplea rather wealthy gentlemans shown interest and, unlike you, he never rests, never settles. Hes ambitious.”

Her words poured out, a torrent shed held back too long. She took a step closer, almost willing William to finally look at her properly, to react.

William remained unmoved, slouched back in his chair, arms folded across his chest, his face the picture of aloofness, though inside he quaked with pain and confusion. He was silent for a time, weighing her words, until he quietly, almost mundanely, asked,

“And the groceries?”

The question hit Charlotte like a slap. She blinked, eyes wide, incredulous.

“Oh, to blazes with the groceries!” she yelled. “Do you not care about a word Im saying?”

William raised his gaze slowly, met her eyes. His own were icy, not angry or desperate, just cold indifference. Only he knew what it cost him to keep that mask.

“In truth, no,” he replied at length, with a dry, hollow laugh. “What did you expect? For me to fall on my knees, beg you to reconsider? Promise to change into someone Im not? To start working all hours just to keep up with your whims? Arent you asking a bit much?”

Charlotte moved to retort but stopped. Staring at him, she realisedhe wasnt going to fight for her. He wouldnt plead, persuade, or promise the world. With that realisation, something inside her tore. She had expected resistance, tears, outragebut not this frosty calm.

“Youre not even going to try?” she whispered, and now her tone was lost, not angry.

“What for? Youve already chosen,” said William calmly, arms folded. “I wont beg you to stay. I respect your choice, even if I dont understand it. Did you really think Id upend my life at your command?”

Charlotte clenched her fists so hard her nails pressed into her palms. Her face burned with humiliation and resentmentshe hadnt anticipated his response. Her anger rose, pressing at her chest, making her want to shout, stamp her feet, break somethingjust to force him to show some shred of feeling.

“That would have been nice,” she spat, holding his gaze. “At least youd still stand a chance!”

Her voice wavered, but she fought to remain composed. She waited for him to startle, to act sheepish, to explain. But William just raised an eyebrow again, as though hearing some mildly tedious story.

“You think rather highly of yourself, Charlotte,” he replied coolly, stretching back in his seat. “You were convenient, Ill say that. But if I so much as whistle, I could find a dozen more like you. In fact, you may have done me a favour, sparing me from playing the philanderer.”

His flat, matter-of-fact tone stung Charlotte harder than any outburst could have done. She advanced a pace, holding herself back from grabbing him, shaking him.

“You How can you just sit there so calmly?” she almost screamed. Her voice was raw, her eyes stung with unshed tears. This was not the reaction shed rehearsed. She had expected him to beg her, to promise change, to swear love. But the coldness left her completely wrongfooted.

“What would you have me do, cry?” he replied, looking straight into her eyes. “Frankly, I should thank my lucky stars that were parting.”

A heavy silence fell. Only the clock on the walltick, tickcounted away the seconds of their last conversation. Charlotte stood breathing heavily, struggling to process what shed just heard. Words hovered on her tongue but wouldnt come. What she felt was not only hurt, but a strange bewilderment. Nothing was happening as shed imagined.

A sharp slap cracked through the silence. Charlotte didnt even feel herself do it. Her hand rose on its own, and the next moment, the sting echoed up her fingers. She paused, staring at William, waiting for some reactionanger, pain, outrage. But he just moved his head a fraction with the blow, and didnt change his posture.

That lack of response spurred her on. Balling her fists, Charlotte rushed into the bedroom. She yanked a suitcase from the wardrobe, flipped it open, and began hurling in her belongingsblouses, jeans, shoesall tossed in without order, as quickly as possible. She was racing, as if afraid that if she stopped, her resolveand her hastily assembled new lifewould collapse.

Yes, she had instigated the break. Yes, she had accused him of not providing enough. But that didnt mean he ought to sit there savouring the event! In her imagination, it had played out differentlyshe pictured him pleading, promising, changing. But all he did was sit, as though none of it mattered.

But of course, it did matter

William sat alone at the kitchen table, his head in his hands. Elbows pressed into the wood, fingers tangled in his hair, though he barely registered it. There was a tempest raging in himhe wanted to leap up, shout, turn the table over, smash something, just to let out this burning tumult of pain and fury. But he didnt move. He gritted his teeth so hard his jaw ached, because he knew, if he let go now, he might never stop.

He truly loved Charlotte! He had spent six months planning a proposala wedding ring in a velvet box hidden in the top drawer. Hed chosen it carefully, compared options, put away the money, imagined her delight. He dreamed of the perfect proposal, the start of a shared life. Now it all seemed so stupid, so hopelessly naïve.

He heard her rummaging aboutwardrobe doors banging, clothes thrown, her ragged breathing as she wrestled the zip on her case. Every sound fell like a hammer in his head. He wanted to go, to say somethingbut what? Everything had been said. Or not said. Or said all wrong.

The scent of strong tea and something faintly singed (hed forgotten to turn off the cooker) lingered in the roomprosaic, everyday smells, but they struck at him now. It was all breaking apart so mundanely as though those three years together had been nothing but a poorly-scripted play, and their curtain had finally fallen.

William remembered Charlottes dreama grand house in some quiet village outside the city. She often described it with delight: spacious rooms, big windows, a tidy garden, peace all around. Shed always insisted she wanted to live somewhere safe, with good neighbours, plenty of space, and proper security. She painted this vision of their ideal life, and he had truly wanted to make it real.

He had never been idle, despite her accusations. No, over the past year he had worked harder than ever: taking on extra projects, learning new skills, not shying from challenges. It had paid off. Hed already been promoted once, with rumours of another in the works. His salary had improved, and though he hadnt told Charlotte, hed planned the surprise: to someday take her to a village, show her the house and say, Its ours now, Charlotte. Dreams do come true.

Sitting there, head in his hands, he recalled how hed imagined her face that dayher joy, that hug. Hed even looked at several housesnot the most extravagant, perhaps, but warm, with gardens, well-laid out. As he browsed listings or drove past likely cottages, he pictured their mornings on the terrace, barbecues with friends, the life they were supposed to build

His thoughts broke off. He clenched his fists so tightly that his nails bit into his palms. How had she not seen how hard hed tried? How could she honestly believe he didnt care? True, he hadnt shared every plan or every new pay risehed wanted to get it right, make a real surprise. To show her he listened, was willing to work, to strive.

William breathed deeply, trying to steady his shaking hands. Only one question circled in his mind:

Why? Why did everything fall apart just when I was about to make her happy?

He rose slowly. His legs felt like lead, each step echoing dully in his head. He walked to the bathroom, barely aware of his surroundings, only knowing he needed to be away from that stifling kitchen for a moment.

Splashing cold water over his face, he caught sight of himself in the mirror, his cheek red and faintly swollen where shed slapped him. “A good wallop,” he thought numbly. “Charlotte always had a strong arm.” He rubbed his face as though to erase the sting, or perhaps the memory itself.

While he stood there, he heard the front door slam shut. He froze, listening. Has she already gone? The thought flitted through his mind. So quickly?

He dried his face and stepped into the hall. The half-open bedroom door revealed an open wardrobe, clothes scattered on the bed and floor. Surely, shed prepared in advance? Perhaps some bags had been packed, just waiting.

William thrust a hand into his jeans pocket, found the velvet box. He crushed it so tightly the corners dug in. Without thinking, he pulled it out and pitched it toward the bin. It landed with a dull thud amid papers and wrappers.

Thats where it belongs now, he thought, staring at the bin. He felt numb, neither crying nor raging nor despairingjust a leaden emptiness filling every part of him.

He crossed to the window, staring at the street. Outside, life carried onpeople walking hurriedly, children running in the park, a car honked in the distance. It was all the same as before. Only for him, the whole world had overturned in the space of a single afternoon, while he hadnt even registered the moment it all changed.

**************************

Charlotte left with the certainty that she was beginning a new chapter. Her suitorthe well-off gentleman on whom shed pinned such hopeslasted only a matter of weeks before losing interest and vanishing without a word. No explanations, no regreta wall of silence met her calls and messages.

Alone again, Charlotte floundered. First she was angryat him, at herself, at the world. Then, she sank into reflection: where did she go wrong, what had she missed? More and more, Williams image rose in her mindhis calm face, his quiet smile, the measured words that final evening. She remembered so clearly nowhe never raised his voice, never debased himself, never tried to hold her back. And what once seemed indifferent now felt like something morerespect, perhaps, for her and for himself.

A month after their split, she resolved to try once again. She dressed in her best, covered her pallor with careful makeup, and went to his house. Standing on the doorstep, clutching her handbag, she mustered up the courage and finally rang the bell.

William did not answer at once. When he opened the door, it was clear he was unprepared for companyhair tousled, wrapped in a dressing gown, mug of tea in hand. At the sight of her, his face remained neutralnot surprised, nor pleased, nor angryjust empty.

William, I she began, but he interrupted gently, eyes downcast.

Dont.

I wanted to talk,” she ventured, taking a tentative step closer, but he didnt move. “I made a mistake. You were right about everything. I I want to come back.

He set his mug down, arms folded across his chest.

Come back? he echoed, as if testing the words. Back to what, Charlotte? Theres no us anymore.

But we could start fresh! she pleaded, desperation in her voice. Ive changed, I know what I want now. I wont ask what I did before. Please just give me another chance.

He shook his head, his smile faint and weary rather than mocking.

A chance? For what? Six months on, would you decide again Im not enough? Hear another whisper of better prospects and disappear? I wont play that game.

She tried to speak, but he lifted his hand to silence her.

You know, I bought you a ring. Meant to propose that night, he said at last, looking past her. My first instinct was to fling it in the bin, which I did. But then I dug it back out. I kept it, as a reminder of just how mercenary some people can be.

Charlotte was silent. Words clotted in her throat, tears pricked at her eyes, but she held them back. All she could do was nod, turn, and descend the steps.

William shut the door, returned to the kitchen, took out the little box and traced his finger along the velvet, then tucked it away.

It was over.

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