The Key He Gave Away
Fried onions and unfamiliar cologne greeted me at my own front door before I ever saw the suitcases.
For one strange second, I stood in the hallway of the condo I had owned for eight years and wondered if the clinic had given me the wrong medication. My key turned the lock. My name was on the deed. But the smell, the shoes scattered across the entry tile, the half-open suitcase leaning against my umbrella stand, none of it belonged to my life.
I had left that morning for a routine medical checkup, the kind that makes you feel older before the doctor even says anything. Blood pressure, joints, sleep. The usual list. My doctor had told me to take things easier, drink more water, avoid unnecessary stress. I almost laughed when he said that. At sixty-eight, stress no longer asks permission.
That afternoon, it was already in my kitchen.
A woman’s laugh came from somewhere near the stove, loud and comfortable, as if she had been laughing there for years. A man’s voice answered from the dining area. Something scraped hard against cast iron. My favorite skillet. The one David bought me the first Christmas after Alex was born, back when money was tight but he still found a way to wrap it in green paper.
My hand tightened around my purse strap.
I stepped inside slowly, letting the door close behind me with a soft click that nobody noticed.
Lorraine stood at my stove.
Lorraine was the mother of Jenna, the woman my son was supposed to marry in ten days. I had met her three times, each at a restaurant or wedding office where she wore pearls and said things like “family is everything.” Now she was in my kitchen wearing one of my aprons, stirring a pot with my wooden spoon.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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