The storage unit smelled like rust and old cardboard and the particular dryness of a place that has been sealed against the weather for a long time. I stood in the entrance for a moment after rolling up the door, letting my eyes adjust to the dimness, my hand still on the metal handle. I had been to this unit only once before, fifteen years ago, when Robert rented it to store his mother’s furniture after the estate sale.
He had kept the key on a small hook behind the kitchen cabinet where we kept the light bulbs, the kind of place you only know about if you have lived in a house long enough to learn its hiding spots. I had found it three days after the funeral while reorganizing the kitchen out of the particular restless grief that makes women clean things. The key was attached to a paper tag in Robert’s handwriting.
It said only: Ellie. When you’re ready. I had not been ready for six weeks.
The trunk sat at the back of the unit on a metal shelf, navy blue with brass fittings, the kind of trunk that belonged in a Twenties photograph. Robert had owned it since before we married. I had always assumed it held old papers, tax records, the kinds of documents men of his generation felt obligated to keep but never actually reviewed.
I had never opened it. He had never invited me to. I carried it to the folding table near the entrance and sat down.
My hands were steadier than I expected. My heart was not. The trunk was packed with precision, the way Robert did everything.
Neatly labeled folders arranged in order, sealed envelopes, a slim metal lockbox at the bottom. No clutter. No randomness.
Just the quiet efficiency of a man who had been planning this moment for longer than I knew. The first folder was labeled in his block capitals: DEBT, PUBLIC. Inside were copies of loan documents, lawsuits, and financial statements I recognized from the last two years of his life.
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