Page 126 of Power Play

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Another voice note.

This one’s only eleven seconds.

Which, by Murphy standards, is basically a haiku.

I stare at it, toying with the idea of pressing play.

I don’t.

Not yet.

Instead, I text my sister something innocuous about our mum’s birthday next week, scroll through Instagram until I’m numb, and let Joey Tribbiani’s energy soothe me.

But eventually, because I am tragically human, I press play.

His voice is quiet. Rough. Like maybe he recorded it while lying down. Or maybe he’s just as wrecked as I am.

“I saw your text. You’re right. You don’t owe me anything. But I’m not giving up. I just wanted you to know that.”

That’s it.

No grand speeches. No “I love you.” No begging.

Just that.

I throw my phone across the sofa as if it’s contagious.

Because now I miss him.

Because now it hurts again.

Because now, all the anger’s still there, burning hot and sharp, but tangled in it is something softer I’m not ready to name.

I don’t know what to do with that.

So I don’t do anything.

I finish my wine. I cry for exactly seven minutes at the end of the episode. I fall asleep on the sofa with my heart still cracked right down the centre.

But I don’t reply.

Because I’m not ready.

Not yet.

And maybe not ever.

CHAPTER SIXTY

MURPHY

It’s barely 9am and I’m already dying.

“Again!” Coach yells from the sideline, voice like a drill sergeant possessed.

I double over, hands on my knees, sweat dripping off my nose. My lungs are on fire and my thighs feel as though they’ve been personally cursed by a vengeful god.

“Did someone piss in his coffee this morning?” I mutter.