The phone call came on an ordinary Tuesday evening in Dallas, the kind of autumn night where the heat has finally broken and you can open your windows to let in air that doesn’t feel like breathing through wet cotton. I was standing in my kitchen, stirring a pot of chicken soup that was more memory than necessity—after twenty-five years of teaching high school English, I’d finally retired, but some habits refused to die. The stack of papers on my table wasn’t student essays anymore, just crossword puzzles and grocery lists, but my brain still reached for the familiar routine of grading something while dinner cooled.
When my phone lit up with an unknown number, I almost let it go to voicemail. At fifty-eight, widowed for fifteen years and living on a teacher’s pension, I didn’t get many urgent calls. Most days passed in comfortable silence, punctuated only by weekly phone calls with my son David and the occasional visit from neighbors who still remembered when my husband was alive and our house was full of noise.
But something made me answer. Maybe it was the same instinct that used to tell me when a student was about to confess to plagiarism, or when a parent was calling with news that would require tissues and a closed door. “Hello?” I said, tucking the phone between my shoulder and ear as I reached for a dish towel.
“Mrs. Thompson? This is Rick Brennan.
I photographed David and Jessica’s wedding.”
I remembered Rick—charming, professional, expensive. Jessica’s parents had spared no expense for their daughter’s wedding, and Rick Brennan was apparently the most sought-after wedding photographer in Dallas. I’d met him briefly during the reception, where he’d complimented my dress and assured me he’d captured beautiful moments of David and me dancing.
“Of course, Rick. How are you?” I kept my voice pleasant, but his tone was setting off alarm bells. This wasn’t a social call.
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