Jason didn’t shout when he said it. He didn’t raise his voice or make it dramatic. He was standing in our kitchen in socks, still carrying the faint smell of pancake batter and coffee, holding a plain brown cardboard box with both hands like it weighed more than it should.
The morning light came through the window the way it does on good days, warm and unhurried, the kind of light that makes you believe the world is basically safe. Jason was looking at the shipping label with the focused stillness he gets when something has caught the engineering part of his brain, the part that catalogs small discrepancies before the rest of him has finished processing them. His shoulders were tight.
His hands were very still. “Don’t open it,” he said. I laughed the way you laugh when someone makes a face that seems like the beginning of a joke.
“Why?” I asked. “You think it’s cursed?”
Jason did not smile. He did not make the dumb, warm remark he usually makes when I’m overthinking something.
He nodded at the box, then at me. “Look closer,” he said. “Please.”
I stepped around the counter.
I leaned in and looked at the label the way you look at something when someone who pays attention to things has asked you to look at it carefully. And then I saw it. My breath stopped in the specific way that happens when your body understands something your mind is still catching up to.
I did not open the box. I did something else. Thirty minutes later, there were two officers on my porch.
My name is Rosanna Russo. In my family, it was never Rosanna. It was Riso, a nickname my sister Ellie invented at two because she could not pronounce it correctly, and my parents kept it because it made me sound smaller, lighter, easier to dismiss.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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