The blanket was heavier in my lap after Kyle called than it had been when I carried it into that baby shower.
That is the strange thing about hidden meaning.
Nothing changes in the object, yet suddenly your hands know the weight of everything inside it.
The kitchen was quiet except for the faint rattle of the old refrigerator and the little buzz of the light above the sink.
I had placed the blanket across my knees the way I used to lay wedding gowns across my worktable, smoothing the fabric before I touched a single stitch.
Cream wool ran under my palms, soft and patient.
The blue sailboats along the border looked almost childlike in the yellow light, each one tilting forward as if it were going somewhere.
Frank would have loved them.
He would have stood behind me, pretending not to be impressed, and then he would have bent close to inspect one tiny sailboat the way a mechanic checks an engine.
He trusted work he could see.
He trusted a straight seam, a tightened screw, a repaired hinge, a planted tomato stake, a dollar put aside on a Friday because someday Tuesday might need it.
Madison had trusted labels.
That afternoon at the shower, those two worlds had met over a trash bin.
I had known Madison did not like me much.
She was never openly cruel at first, just polished in the way some people use politeness like a glass wall.
She thanked me for birthday cards without opening them.
She called my fabric shop “sweet,” the way a person might call a child’s drawing sweet before throwing it away.
She once asked Kyle, while I was standing right beside him, whether handmade gifts were “a family thing” or “just your mom’s hobby.”
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
TAP ” READ MORE ” 👇
