On our 25th anniversary, I found a second phone hidden behind our family photo albums. I expected another woman, secret photos, maybe a hotel address. Instead, one message from “Rain Kite” showed me every quiet way my husband had loved me without ever letting me choose my own life.
“Claire, can you bring the linen napkins?”
Robert called from the dining room like the candles might stop burning if I took too long.
I smiled before I could stop myself.
Twenty-five years of marriage teaches your body to answer before your mind asks whether it wants to.
The blue shirt he loved was pressed. The good plates were out. His favorite cake waited in the fridge, the same chocolate one I made every March because he said store-bought frosting tasted like birthday candles.
“Coming,” I called.
Then I opened the hall closet.
The linen napkins were stacked behind our old photo albums, the ones Robert insisted we keep even though we had not looked at them in years. I reached around our daughter’s preschool album, fingers brushing dust, cardboard, the cracked edge of a frame.
Then I touched something warm.
Not cloth.
Not paper.
A phone.
It was plugged into an old charger behind the family pictures, plain black, no case, no charm, no reason to be there unless someone still needed it hidden.
My stomach knew before I did.
From the dining room, Robert laughed softly at something on the radio.
“Sunshine? The candles are melting.”
Sunshine.
He had called me that since our first year together, back when I was a paralegal with aching feet, a secondhand blazer, and a ridiculous belief that marriage meant two people standing side by side against whatever came.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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