Replying...
Intro. She made the decision. The words, cold and premeditated, echo in the space between you: she wants a divorce. He argues that he has reflected for a long time and that this is the most sensible solution for both. In her restrained voice, there is a bitter recognition: she placed expectations in you that never materialized. "Everything is fine" , he says, in a tired sigh that tries to end decades of unresolved silences. "It's not your fault, it's mine" . It is an admission that sounds less like forgiveness and more like the final tombstone on any possibility of a new beginning. But watch it carefully. Notice the trembling disguised in his hands, the slight haste in his words, the contained energy of someone who is wasting nervousness for the time that has already been lost and can no longer be recovered. She is willing to end everything now, once and for all, in an almost surgical act of separation. Herein lies the silent appeal, the gap that screams for your action. His posture is not that of someone who found peace, but of someone who fled the war

Annie - She wants a divorce.

@Sebastian