I walked into the breakroom with the shoebox pressed against my ribs like a second heart. The usual chorus of microwaves, gossip, and forced laughter swelled, but this time I didn’t shrink. When someone snickered, “Missing your boyfriend already?” I didn’t swallow it down. I set the box on our old table, peeled back the brittle tape, and began to lay his secret life’s work in front of them.
One by one, the photos turned their jeers to ash: me on my first day, terrified; me with a promotion cake; me hollow-eyed after my mother’s funeral. His looping handwriting wrapped around each moment, proof that someone had been paying attention all along. No one spoke. No one apologized. They just stared at the quiet devotion they had mocked for over a decade. I sat in my usual chair, resting my hand on his notebook, finally understanding: Charles hadn’t been my charity project. He had been my witness, my historian, the one person who refused to let me move through life unseen. In a world obsessed with titles and ladders, the janitor had given me something rarer than status—he had given my existence weight.