I know how it looks. A grown man hunched in a hallway, flanked by a crooked lamp and a sad-looking ficus, pecking at a laptop on a tray table like I’m at some kind of minimalist coworking space for the emotionally overattached. But I promise you, it’s not as pathetic as it sounds.
Okay, maybe it is.
But it also kind of makes perfect sense.
Two weeks ago, my wife—Nina—had surgery. Nothing terrifying, thankfully, but enough to knock her off her feet for a while. Gallbladder removal. It wasn’t the procedure that shook me, honestly—it was seeing her so quiet, so still, in a hospital gown that looked about three sizes too big, hair tucked under a disposable cap, joking about how she looked like a lunch lady while I tried not to cry.
When we got home, she insisted I keep to my normal routine. “Work from the dining room like you always do,” she said, propped up in bed like a sleepy queen, voice raspy but still managing that sarcastic bite I love so much. “You don’t have to turn into a full-time nurse. I’ll buzz if I need you.”
I tried. I really did. Sat in my usual spot with my laptop and my planner and that stupid motivational mug my coworkers gave me that says “Coffee First, Adulting Second.” But I couldn’t focus. My ears strained to hear every cough, every creak of the bed frame, every moment of silence that went just a beat too long.
By the end of the first day, I’d walked back and forth to the bedroom so many times I swear I’d worn a groove in the floorboards. On the second day, she groaned, “Babe, seriously. I’m fine. Stop hovering like a concerned hummingbird.”
So I made a deal with myself.
If I was going to hover, I might as well do it efficiently.
I found an old folding chair in the closet, wiped it down, and dragged it into the hallway right outside our bedroom. The tray table came next. I brought my laptop, some files from work, a portable fan, and a half-melted candle that smelled vaguely like cinnamon and defeat. And just like that, the hallway became my new office.
It was ridiculous. It is ridiculous. But in that narrow sliver of space, just five feet from where she sleeps, I found something kind of… perfect.
I could hear her laugh when her sister called. I could pass her tissues through the cracked door. And sometimes, when she thought I wasn’t paying attention, she’d peek out and just watch me work, smiling like she was seeing me for the first time again.
This morning, she slid a note under the door while I was typing up a client report. A tiny yellow Post-it with a shaky heart drawn on it and the words: You make me feel safe. Even from 5 feet away.
I pressed that thing to my chest like it was a love letter from a past life.
But that was this morning.
This afternoon… things got weird.
Nina had dozed off after lunch, breathing softly behind the door while I sipped cold coffee and fought through a mind-numbing spreadsheet. Her phone buzzed on the nightstand. I heard it faintly through the wall. Normally I wouldn’t touch it, but it kept buzzing. Three calls in a row. Then a fourth. Same number.
Worried it might be something urgent—family, doctor, I don’t know—I slipped in, careful not to wake her, and picked up.
“Hello?” I whispered.
There was silence on the other end. Then a low voice, rough but oddly familiar.
“Who is this?”
“This is her husband,” I said.
Another pause.
“I didn’t know she was married.”
My throat went dry. “Who is this?”
“I’m… a friend. Just tell her Alex called.”
He hung up before I could respond.
I stared at the screen. Alex. No last name. Just Alex.
I put the phone back where I found it, sat in my hallway chair, and tried to focus, but my mind kept replaying that voice. Calm. Too calm. And that line—I didn’t know she was married.
When Nina woke up, I didn’t say anything at first. I watched her shuffle to the bathroom with her blanket draped around her shoulders like a cape, yawning like a sleepy lioness, utterly oblivious. But it gnawed at me.
That night, over dinner—soup I microwaved and burned my tongue on—I finally asked, “Hey, who’s Alex?”
Her spoon paused midair. She blinked. “Alex?”
“Yeah. Someone called a few times this afternoon. Said his name was Alex. Sounded surprised when I answered.”
Something shifted in her face. Not guilt, exactly. More like… dread.
She lowered her spoon slowly. “Oh. That Alex.”
I waited.
“He’s… someone I used to know. From before we met. We dated for a little while, but it was complicated. Ended badly. He reached out a few months ago out of the blue. I didn’t respond.”
“But he has your number.”
“I forgot to block him. I should have.”
I wanted to believe her. I really did. But something in her voice felt rehearsed. A little too smooth.
Later that night, when she fell asleep again, I sat in the hallway in the dark, lit only by my laptop screen, and stared at her phone. I wasn’t proud of what I did next.
I opened her messages.
Most were innocent. Group chats, family, work stuff. But then I found a thread labeled just “A.”
I opened it.
The last message was over a month old. He’d written: Still think about you. Always will.
Her reply was one word: Don’t.
That was it.
I should have felt relief. But all I felt was hollow.
I didn’t sleep that night. Just sat out there, keeping vigil like some useless hallway knight.
In the morning, Nina woke to find me still in my chair, eyes bloodshot, laptop closed.
She knelt in front of me, grimacing slightly from the movement, and cupped my face. “You looked?”
“I had to,” I whispered.
She nodded. “Okay. I get it. I should’ve told you.”
“I want to trust you, Nina. I really do.”
“Then do.”
I looked at her, this woman I had folded my life around, turned a hallway into a devotion altar for, and realized something simple and profound: trust isn’t something you grant once and forget. It’s something you choose again and again, sometimes even when it feels terrifying.
So I nodded. Not because everything was perfect. But because I believed in us.
Over the next few days, things shifted. Nina blocked the number. I deleted the message thread so I wouldn’t keep revisiting it. We started a little ritual: every morning, before I opened my laptop, she’d pass me a note under the door. Something silly, or sweet, or wildly inappropriate. And I’d tape it to the wall like a badge of honor.
My hallway office became a monument to small acts of love.
The thing is, love doesn’t always look like grand gestures or romantic getaways. Sometimes it looks like a tray table and a cheap chair and the quiet resolve to stay close even when it’s awkward, even when it hurts a little.
Nina got better. Eventually she didn’t need rest anymore. But the hallway office stayed—for a while longer than necessary. Not because I didn’t have other options. But because every time I sat there, I remembered that love is a choice. A choice to stay. A choice to believe. A choice to forgive.
And maybe that’s the point.
So yeah. Laugh at the hallway setup if you want. But it saved something between us.
Would you do the same? Or have you already, in your own way?
If this hit home for you, give it a like or share it with someone who needs the reminder. Love isn’t always loud—but it’s always worth the effort.