What Grew After
Part One: The Year of Endurance
My name is Amy Jackson. I am fifty-two years old, and the story I am about to tell you did not begin with my husband calling to tell me he had demolished my mother’s house. It began much earlier, in the quiet accumulation of a marriage where I kept confusing endurance for peace.
I married Scott when I was thirty. He was stable, employed, polite in public, and good enough at playing the role of a dependable man that I did not question what sat underneath until the cost of not questioning it became too high to bear. We built the kind of life that looks ordinary from every angle: school pickups, soccer games, flu seasons, tax seasons, birthday cakes from the grocery store.
We lived in corporate housing tied to Scott’s employer, a regional construction supplier that offered apartments to senior staff. The rent was low and the commute was manageable and I did not think very hard about the fact that the roof over our heads was not truly ours. Scott was an only child, and his parents made it clear from the first year of our marriage that they considered our current life a temporary arrangement before we eventually folded ourselves into theirs.
His mother liked to call herself direct. His father liked to call himself traditional. What they were, in practice, was selfish with an air of authority that had never once been challenged by anyone with the legal means to do it.
My parents lived forty minutes away in the house my brother and I grew up in. A modest split-level with cedar siding gone silver over the decades, a deep front yard, and a narrow back deck my father rebuilt twice with his own hands. A dogwood near the driveway.
Lilacs along the back fence. Yellowed vinyl in the kitchen my mother always meant to replace. An upstairs bathroom door that stuck in humidity.
A basement that smelled like cardboard and old winters. It was not a fancy house. It was home.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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