THE NIGHT I DISAPPEAR
Once a week… I disappear.
Not dramatically.
Not in a way anyone would notice.
Just quietly.
Carefully.
Like it doesn’t matter.
I wait until she’s asleep—really asleep. Breathing slow. Not moving.
Then I slide out of bed.
Shoes on.
Keys in hand.
Door closed without a sound.
And just like that—
I’m gone.
THE PLACE NO ONE KNOWS ABOUT
It’s only ten minutes away.
A small, 24-hour diner.
Nothing special during the day.
But at 1AM?
It feels like a different world.
I always sit at the counter.
Same seat, if it’s open.
Same order.
Scrambled eggs. Bacon. Pancakes. Coffee.
No phone.
No scrolling.
No talking.
Just… quiet.
THE STRANGERS WHO DON’T ASK QUESTIONS
There are usually two or three other people.
A truck driver.
A tired nurse.
Someone who looks like they don’t want to be anywhere else either.
We never speak.
We don’t need to.
There’s something understood in that silence.
We’re all here for the same reason.
To disappear for a little while.
THE ONLY MOMENT THAT’S MINE
That hour—
That single, fragile hour—
belongs completely to me.
No expectations.
No roles.
No “boyfriend,” no responsibilities, no noise.
Just me… and the sound of a fork against a plate.
And for a moment—
I feel like myself again.
THE SECRET I NEVER EXPLAINED
She doesn’t know.
She’s never asked.
And honestly?
She probably wouldn’t care.
That’s the strange part.
I could tell her.
I could say, “Hey, sometimes I just go out and eat alone at night.”
She’d probably laugh.
Or shrug.
Or even understand.
But I don’t tell her.
Because the second I do—
it stops being mine.
THE PART I DON’T LIKE ADMITTING
At first, I thought it was harmless.
Just a routine.
Just a habit.
Just… peace.
But lately—
I’ve started noticing something.
I don’t just go there for the food.
Or the quiet.
Or even the routine.
THE REAL REASON I GO
I go there because—
for that one hour—
no one knows me.
Not even her.
No expectations.
No version of me I have to be.
No “us.”
Just… me.
THE TRUTH THAT SITS WITH ME ON THE DRIVE HOME
I always get back around 2AM.
Brush my teeth.
Slip back into bed.
She shifts slightly, still asleep.
And I lie there in the dark, staring at the ceiling.
And every time—
the same thought creeps in.
Slow.
Uncomfortable.
Impossible to ignore.
THE QUIET, UNSETTLING REALIZATION
If the best part of my week…
is the hour I spend pretending I don’t exist in her life—
then maybe…
something is already broken.
And the scariest part?
I don’t know if it’s me…
or us.