I was standing in my kitchen making coffee when I heard the garbage disposal running.
That alone wouldn’t have meant a thing—our old sink was loud, the pipes complained, and I’d been up long enough to know a house has its own little noises. But it was 6:30 in the morning, the sky outside the window was still that gray-blue Midwest color, and my daughter-in-law, Ashley, wasn’t supposed to be awake for another hour.
Then I heard something else.
Ceramic.
A sharp, brittle crack—followed by that ugly grinding sound you never forget once you’ve heard it. Like teeth chewing on rocks.
My hand froze mid-scoop over the coffee tin.
The spoon hovered above the grounds. For a half-second I tried to talk myself out of it.
Maybe a plate slipped. Maybe a bowl chipped.
Maybe I was being dramatic.
But my stomach dropped anyway, and I crossed the kitchen in three quick steps, still holding the spoon like it could do something useful.
I slapped the switch.
The disposal shuddered and stopped.
Silence filled the room so fast it felt like pressure in my ears.
I grabbed the little flashlight I kept in the junk drawer—next to rubber bands, a tape measure, and the tiny screwdriver Linda used for her reading glasses. I clicked it on, leaned over the sink, and aimed the beam straight down the drain.
Fragments of white porcelain glinted back at me, mixed with coffee grounds and bits of eggshell.
Not just any porcelain.
Even in pieces, I recognized the delicate hand-painted roses—soft pink with tiny green leaves, the kind of design you don’t see much anymore unless you’re walking through an antique store or a little gift shop by the coast.
My throat went tight.
Because that wasn’t some random mug.
That was Linda’s mug.
The one she bought on our 25th anniversary trip to Maine—back when we still took pictures with a disposable camera and thought the biggest luxury in life was lobster rolls on a picnic bench with the ocean in front of us.
The mug she used every morning for the last eight years of her life.
The mug she hand-washed like it was made of glass—never put it in the dishwasher, never soaked it too long, because she said the roses would fade if you didn’t treat them right.
I stood there staring down the drain as if the right amount of staring could put the pieces back together.
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