Phone call. No knock. No goodbye note slipped under the door.
My daughter-in-law packed up my entire kitchen while I was at my husband’s grave, and when I came home that Sunday afternoon, my own coffee mug was sitting in a cardboard box on the back porch like it didn’t belong to me anymore. I should probably back up. My name doesn’t matter much for this story, but I’ll tell you I’m 68.
I live in a little blue Craftsman house in Asheville, North Carolina, and my husband Frederick passed away the spring before last from a stroke that nobody saw coming. We were married for 41 years. He was the kind of man who fixed the porch light before I noticed it was out, who left the last bite of pie on his plate because he knew I liked the crust.
When he died, the silence in that house just about swallowed me whole. My only son, Cyrus, lives, or lived, I suppose, about 3 hours away in Charlotte with his wife, Marisol. He’s an accountant.
She’s something in real estate, the kind of job where she’s always on her phone in a low voice and looking past you while you’re talking. I’d known her for 9 years by the time all this happened. She’d never been warm to me.
Polite, sure. Smiles like a saleswoman. But warm?
No. Frederick used to say she looked at our house the way an appraiser looks at a property she’s about to flip. I should have listened to him.
It started about 6 months after Frederick passed. Cyrus called on a Tuesday evening, which was unusual because he usually called Sundays. He sounded tired.
He said the apartment lease was up, the rents in Charlotte were absolutely insane, and Marisol had had what he called a difficult quarter. He asked if they could come stay with me. Just for a little while.
A few months at most while they got back on their feet. I said yes before he finished the question. You have to understand, the house was so quiet.
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