20 Borus
The Empty Chair
Alina helped Junior put on his school uniform the neat navy blue blazer, the small tie she fastened with hands that knew every movement by heart
The past year doing this. The same morning ritual
And now, every moment felt precious. Borrowed Like it could be taken away at any time.
“Done,” Alina said softly, straightening Junior’s collar for the last time “So handsome.”
Junior looked at the mirror briefly, then turned to hug Alina suddenly, tightly.
“Maria…” His voice muffled against Alina’s clothes.
“Yes, sweetheart?”
Junior pulled back slightly, looking at Alina’s face with a serious expression.
Then his hand raised–small, gentle–kissing both of Alina’s cheeks with deliberate movements. Like a ritual. Like a blessing.
“When Junior goes to school, Mama don’t be sad, okay,” Junior said firmly. “Promise.”
Alina smiled–broken, but genuine–taking Junior’s small hand and kissing it.
“How can Mama be sad,” she whispered, “when the thing that makes Mama happiest is being with Junior?”
A smile appeared on Junior’s face–wide, genuine.
A smile Alina hadn’t seen in weeks.
A smile that made all the pain, all the humiliation, all the tears–worth it.
“Come on,” Alina said, extending her hand. “Time for breakfast.”
Junior took that hand–small fingers wrapping around Alina’s–and they left the room together.
The dining room was already bright with morning light streaming through the large windows.
And there, sitting at the head of the table–Daniel.
Already dressed neatly. Crisp white shirt. Jacket draped over the chair back. Newspaper folded beside an untouched plate.
Daniel’s eyes lifted as Alina and Junior entered.
There was something in his expression. Relief. Relief seeing the two of them together–like before. Like it should be.
Like the five years he took for granted and only now realized he missed.
“Good morning,” Alina said.
Her voice polite. Proper. But cold. No warmth that was usually there.
No small smile. No “have you eaten?” or “your coffee is cold, I’ll make you fresh?”
Just two words. Formal. Distant.
Daniel felt something twist in his chest.
“Morning,” he replied. Brief. As usual.
But his eyes didn’t leave Alina. Looking at the pale face, eyes still slightly swollen, posture somehow more fragile than usual.
The Empty Choir
Alina brought Junior to his chair-
a special small chair–helping the child sit with practiced, familiar movements. Then Alina turned, about to take the chair beside Daniel–the chair she had always sat in for five years.
But before she could sit, Clarissa’s soft and cheerful voice was heard.
“Sorry! Sorry I’m late!”
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Clarissa entered with quick steps–a soft pink dress somehow too cheerful for morning, hair perfectly styled, natural but deliberate makeup.
“Good morning, Daniel,” she greeted with a bright smile. “Junior, sweetheart, good morning!”
She immediately stepped to the chair Alina was about to sit in–fast, deliberate–and sat with a smooth movement.
Clarissa looked at Alina with a polite smile but with a sharp undertone.
“Oh, Alina,” she said in a gentle tone. “Sorry, but this chair… well, we already agreed, right? About me accompanying Junior at breakfast? Breakfast is important family time for bonding.”
Those words–wrapped in politeness but laced with claim–made the atmosphere in the room suddenly tense.
Alina stood there–frozen for a moment–looking at the chair she sat in every morning for five years.
The chair where she accompanied Daniel who was silent but somehow comforted by her presence.
The chair where she made sure Junior ate properly. Where they laughed about Junior’s funny dreams from last night. Where they planned weekend activities.
Now occupied by another woman. Claimed. Taken.
Alina smiled–thin, not reaching her eyes.
“Of course,” she said in a calm voice. Too calm. “I remember.”
She glanced at Junior, who looked at her with wide eyes–confusion and something like panic.
“Junior,” Alina said gently, “finish your breakfast, okay? All the vegetables too.”
Junior nodded–mechanical–but his hand reached for Alina’s hand. Holding tight.
A clear signal. Don’t go. Stay.
Alina felt something crack in her chest.
But she smiled–gentle, reassuring–and squeezed that small hand.
“Mama is fine,” she whispered. “Junior has to be fine too. Okay?”
Junior looked at her–long, searching–then slowly released her hand. Alina turned, walking toward the door with measured, controlled steps.
“Alina.”
Daniel’s voice–low, but with unmistakable authority.
Alina stopped. Didn’t turn around. Just stood there, back straight, waiting.
“Sit,” Daniel said. “Eat with us.”
Not a request. A command.
The Empty Cha
Alina turned–slow–looking at Daniel with an unreadable expression.
“I’ll eat later,” she said politely. “With Mrs. Helen in the kitchen. As already agreed.”
Daniel’s jaw hardened. “I didn’t—”
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“I have work that needs to be finished this morning,” Alina cut in. Voice still calm, but firm. “So it’s better if I eat later. Excuse me.”
She turned again–decisive this time–stepping toward the door.
“Alina.” Daniel’s voice was louder now. “I’m talking to you. Come back and-
But Alina was already in the corridor. Walking quickly toward the kitchen.
“ALINA!”
Daniel’s voice thundered–frustration, anger mixing with something that might be hurt.
But Alina didn’t stop. Didn’t look back.
Just kept walking until she disappeared from view.
In the dining room, awkward silence.
Daniel stood–half–risen from his chair–with fists clenched at his sides.
Clarissa immediately touched his arm–gentle, soothing.
“Daniel,” she said in a soft voice, “it’s late. You need to eat breakfast or you’ll be late to the office. There’s an important meeting at nine, right?”
Daniel looked at the door where Alina disappeared. Jaw still tight. Something uncomfortable twisting in his chest.
Clarissa squeezed his arm again. “Let her be. Maybe Alina needs space. You already gave her a chance to see Junior–that’s
already very generous.”
Daniel fell silent–conflicted–then slowly sat back down.
But he didn’t reach for his fork. Didn’t touch the food.
Just sat with rigid posture, staring at the empty plate.
Clarissa smiled–satisfied–and turned to Junior with bright cheerfulness.
“Junior, sweetheart,” she said, taking the serving dish, “want more scrambled eggs? Or bacon? Mrs. Helen cooked them crispy like you like.”
Junior looked at the plate in front of him–untouched food.
Then looked at Clarissa.
And unexpectedly–nodded.
“Thank you, Mama Rissa,” he said. Voice flat but polite.
Clarissa’s smile widened. Genuine pleasure in her eyes.
“Good boy,” she said, adding eggs to Junior’s plate. “You see,
Daniel? Junior is starting to cooperate. This is good progress.”
She ate with gestures somehow possessive. Like the lady of the house. Like this was her rightful position.
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