Thirty-Seven Years Told In Six Mornings

Contemporary Romance Sad

Written in response to: "Write a story with the aim of making your reader smile and/or cry." as part of Brewed Awakening.

The cafe had the particular scent of a college town in late autumn: burnt espresso and ambition. Harold stood at the counter, twenty-two years old and regretting his decision to order for both of them.

“And for the lady?” The barista waited, pen hovering.

Miriam was already seated at a corner table, watching him. He’d met her three weeks ago in a philosophy seminar where she’d dismantled Descartes with the casual efficiency of someone swatting a fly. He’d been in love ever since, though he hadn’t told anyone, least of all her.

“She’ll have... umm..."

“Black,” Miriam called from across the room. “Like my soul.” She smiled, lighting up his world in a way that made the morning light shimmer.

She bit her lip as Harold and the barista were laughing. Harold watched her mouth the words “Oh God” to herself, before shrinking into the chair.

When he brought the cups to the table, he could tell she was still recovering from her joke. “I don’t know why I said that. I don’t usually say things like that, I swear.”

“I thought it was funny.”

“You laughed too hard. That means it wasn’t funny.” She took her cup from him, wrapped both hands around it and her posture instantly softened. “Did you want a little coffee with your milk?”

“I know what I like.”

“I’m not judging you.”

“You’re absolutely judging me.”

She reached across the table and took his cup, sipped it, then wrinkled her nose. “Okay. I’m judging you. Just a little though.”

He would remember this moment for the rest of his life. Her hands around his coffee cup, the afternoon light catching the steam, the way her eyes crinkled when she smiled.

* * *

Two years later, they moved into a studio garden level apartment with small windows that faced east and a glass pour-over dripper tucked into a nook by the fridge along with a hand cranked coffee grinder. They were gifts from her mother when she left for college, and she refused to replace them with his Coffee Mate.

Harold woke first. This was new. For most of their relationship, he’d been the one dragged from sleep by alarms and obligations while Miriam floated through her mornings like it was optional. But here, in their first shared home, he found himself awake at six-fifteen, watching dust motes drift through the early morning light.

The Kettle gurgled and hissed, the steam visible in the morning sun. He’d watched her make her own coffee a dozen times. A thirty-minute ritual of pouring gently boiling water over a mound of hand ground coffee beans. How hard could it be?

Was it two scoops? Three? He guessed wrong.

Miriam appeared in the kitchen doorway wearing his old Harvard sweatshirt, her hair a dark halo of chaos. She took the cup he offered, sipped, and said nothing.

“Too strong?”

“It’s fine.”

“I can remake it—”

“I said it’s fine.” She snapped as she continued to sip.

Later, she showed him how to properly do it. Two scoops, not three. Water up to there, then stir to make sure the grounds are soaked through. Then let it bloom. For just a few seconds. Then hot water again in a slow circular motion. Then wait. Then again. Then wait. Then again. Until the water is all used.

They drank in silence as the city woke up around them. Traffic sounds filtered up from the street. Somewhere, a dog barked. He watched her smile as she perched on the windowsill. People watching was one of her small joys. He wanted to be nowhere else.

* * *

The baby changed everything, which was exactly what everyone warned them would happen.

Harold stood at the kitchen counter at 4:47 AM, eyes half-closed, the sleep deprivation making even simple tasks feel like advanced calculus. He’d poured water over the coffee filter but had forgotten the grounds.

Miriam came up behind him with Eleanor on her shoulder. She was too small and new for a nickname, but in his head, he tested both Ellie and El. Miriam surveyed the situation and pushed Eleanor into his arms and began fixing the mistake without a word.

In their exhaustion they’d developed a language comprised entirely of choreography. She touched his shoulder as she passed; he caught her hand, squeezed once, let go.

Forty minutes later, Harold finally sat down with his coffee. He took it black now. A small sign of how she touched his life. He sipped at it. It was cold.

“Do you remember sleeping?” Miriam asked from across the table. Eleanor had finally surrendered to unconsciousness, milk-drunk and boneless in the bassinet.

“Vaguely… I think it was nice.”

“What was it like?”

“Horizontal. Quiet. Not enough.”

She took his cup, microwaved it for thirty seconds, then handed it back to him. In the economy of new parenthood, this was true love.

They sat together in the early light. Not talking. Just existing. He reached over and squeezed her hand. She squeezed back. Outside, the world continued its indifferent spinning, but in this kitchen, in this moment, the universe was small and for just a moment, at peace.

* * *

The house felt larger with Ellie gone.

Harold made coffee on a September morning, the silence was thick. Down the hall, his daughter’s room stood empty. Her bed was made, the walls bare, the boxes moved to a dormitory three states away. He’d helped her move in last week. He’d cried in the car on the way home while Miriam drove.

He made two cups and set one across the table then sat down and stared at it.

Miriam came in, older now. They both were. Though it still surprised him sometimes, catching sight of his own reflection in a mirror. She took her cup, stood at the window where she always stood.

“It’s too quiet,” he said.

“Give it a week. You’ll love it.”

“Will I?”

She didn’t answer. She wasn’t sure either.

They drank looking out at the yard. The swing set was still there. Neither of them had mentioned taking it down. Harold didn’t think they ever would.

* * *

Winter came early this year.

Harold walked into the kitchen. It was still dark and found Miriam already up, coffee made, sitting at the table with a notebook. This was wrong. She was never the early one. In thirty-four years, he could count on both hands the times she’d beaten him to the coffee.

She was writing something. Lists. Measurements. Her handwriting was still the same elegant looping curls.

“What’s this?” He sat down across from her.

“Instructions.”

“For what?”

A tear fell, wetting the paper in front of her.

“I don’t need instructions Miriam,” he said. “I just need you.”

“I know.” Now she looked up, and her eyes were bright and shimmering behind the tears. She was still the woman who’d dismantled Descartes in a philosophy seminar, who’d drunk his terrible coffee on their first morning together, who’d handed him a baby one morning and trusted him to keep her safe. “But this is what I can give you,” she choked.

She walked him through it. Step by step.

His hands shook.

She put her hands over his. Steadied him.

Outside, it began a cold, quiet, December snow. They sat together watching it fall, her hand still covering his on the table.

* * *

The first morning was the hardest.

Harold stood at the counter. 4:30 AM. He’d given up on sleep. The house was quiet in a way that felt aggressive and insulting. Like it was trying to remind him of his loss. Her reading glasses were still on the nightstand. Her slippers were still by the bed. The world was full of her absence.

His hands moved automatically. Two scoops, level. Water up to there, then stir to make sure the grounds are soaked through. Then let it bloom. For just a few seconds. Then hot water again in a slow circular motion. Then wait. Then again. Then wait. Then again. Until the water is all used.

He poured two cups… He… poured two cups.

He set one across the table.

Sat down.

The realization came in a wave of tears. Not a single crash of grief but an accumulation, that beat itself against his soul like waves against the shore. The empty chair. The untouched cup. The expectation for her… For her to come around the corner.

The binder sat on the counter, worn at the edges and filled with papers and reports. He didn’t want to open it.

He did anyway.

Her handwriting filled the pages. Practical notes and efficient instructions for medication schedules, bills, insurance contacts. He brushed a finger over the elegant looping curves of her words. He’d done everything he could. And it still… It still wasn’t enough.

He sat the binder on the table, reaching for the untouched cup. It felt cool in his hands, the steam long since stopped rising. He carried it to the sink, and he waited. The silence of their home felt like knives in his back.

He let out a breath and turned, opening the microwave. Forty-five seconds was enough to reinvigorate the mug. Then he left the steaming mug of freshly warmed coffee on her windowsill, where the morning light might find it.

Posted Jan 27, 2026
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37 likes 44 comments

Atxl Qiut
16:01 Jun 14, 2026

ts is so fire

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