I heard Margaret before I saw her. Her voice slipped through the half-open kitchen window, carried on the crunch of gravel under her heels and the metallic scrape of the chicken feed scoop against the porch steps. I was standing in my grandmother’s kitchen with a mug of tea in both hands, surrounded by the old wooden cabinets Ana had wiped down every Saturday morning for as long as I could remember.
The curtains still smelled of lavender detergent. The floorboards still creaked in the same spot near the stove. “Oh, don’t worry,” Margaret said into her phone.
“She won’t notice if a few eggs go missing. She’s too busy pretending this place matters.”
Then she laughed. It was not a loud laugh.
It was bright and clipped and polished, the kind of laugh that makes cruelty sound like a social grace. “That farm shack,” she continued, “is the perfect place for dumping trash.” A pause. “Meaning her, apparently.”
I froze with one hand around the mug and the other hovering near the sugar jar.
The refrigerator hummed. A hen clucked somewhere outside. The old clock over the back door ticked with the stubborn regularity it had kept my entire life, as if even time found the moment embarrassing and was trying to move past it quickly.
I did not walk to the window. I did not push open the screen door. I stood in the middle of that kitchen and let my mother-in-law’s voice settle over everything in it, and I thought about how the house had survived worse than this and how it would survive this too, and I thought about Ana, and I breathed.
My grandmother’s name was Ana Miroslava Petric, and she had been made of patience and flour and the specific stubbornness of women who have outlasted most of what was thrown at them. She had emigrated at twenty-three with a husband who died too young and two daughters to raise in a country where she had to learn the language from a library book because nobody had time to teach her. She bought the house on a rural road outside a small town in the kind of deal that was only possible in a specific decade, when a woman who asked the right questions in the right order could sometimes acquire land that nobody else wanted badly enough yet.
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