I was thirty-one, holding a box cutter in one hand and a carton of cold chow mein in the other, when my mother called and said, “Astrid, please tell me you haven’t found it.”
I stopped chewing. “Found what?”
She made a broken little sound, and I realized she was crying. “The room.
The one your father made me promise to forget.”
I didn’t answer right away, because I was sixteen again, barefoot in the rain while strangers carried our couch down the front steps. We didn’t sell that house. We lost it.
Dad had missed too many payments and ignored too many letters, or that was the story I grew up believing. That morning, Mom stood in the driveway with both hands over her mouth while my brother Asher cried over a black garbage bag full of his school trophies. “Where’s Dad?” he kept asking.
Dad was on the porch, staring at the wet floorboards like they had answers. Then Uncle Tom pulled up late with two coffees and no umbrella. “Come on, Drew,” he said to my father, like the neighbors weren’t watching.
“Keep your chin up.”
Dad didn’t look at him. Didn’t look at any of us. After that we moved into an apartment above a laundromat, where the floor shook with the dryers.
Mom never talked about the house again. But I did. I talked about it with every bill I paid early, every cheap dinner over my laptop, every savings account I checked before bed.
People called me disciplined. But honestly, I was just remembering. When the house came up at auction after Mr.
Walter, the last owner, passed away, I signed up before fear could talk me out of it. The auctioneer handed me the papers. “Planning to flip it, young lady?”
I wiped my face.
“No. I’m taking my home back.”
That evening I called Asher from the front porch before I went inside. “You really bought it?” he asked.
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