Daniel’s glass slipped from his hand.
It didn’t shatter at first.
It hit the edge of the marble island, bounced once, then burst across the floor in a spray of wine and crystal. Red drops spotted Lacey’s bare feet. Someone near the window gasped. The music from the hidden speakers kept playing, soft jazz over the sound of Daniel’s life coming apart.

His sister stood in the doorway.
Marisol.
Forty-eight. Hair pulled into a low bun. Navy trench coat darkened at the shoulders from rain. One hand gripped the handle of a black suitcase. The other held a thick manila envelope against her chest.
Beside her stood a woman in a charcoal suit with a leather briefcase.
Behind them was another woman.
Small.
Quiet.
Brown hair streaked with gray, arms folded around herself like she expected someone to tell her to leave.
Daniel saw her and went white.
Not pale.
White.
Lacey looked from Daniel to the woman.
“Who is that?”
Daniel didn’t answer.
Rosa did.
Her voice came thin from the wheelchair.
“Emily?”
The woman’s mouth trembled.
“Hi, Mrs. Mercer.”
Rosa’s rosary beads slid from her fingers and landed softly in her lap.
The apartment went silent except for rain tapping the glass walls thirty floors above downtown Chicago.
I had never met Emily in person.
Only in documents.
Old photos.
One hospital record.
Three tax forms Daniel had hidden in a file labeled “car warranty.”
And a birthday card written in a child’s hand.
Dear Dad, maybe next year.
Daniel took one step forward.
“Claudia,” he said, low and fast. “Do not do this.”
I looked at the wine spreading under his bare foot.
“You already did.”
Marisol rolled her suitcase across the threshold.
The wheels clicked over the tile.
Lacey backed away as if the suitcase itself carried disease.
“This is insane,” she said. “Daniel, tell them to leave.”
Marisol’s eyes moved to Lacey’s robe.
My robe.
Cream silk.
The one Daniel had told me must have been lost at the dry cleaner.
Marisol’s face did not change.
“Nice robe.”
Lacey pulled it tighter.
The lawyer stepped inside and closed the door behind them.
Not slammed.
Closed.
That sound trapped Daniel with every version of himself he had tried to keep in separate rooms.
The apartment smelled like wine, perfume, rain on wool coats, and the garlic shrimp cooling on a silver tray. Candlelight shook against the marble counters. A city ambulance wailed far below, thin and distant. The carpet near the sofa felt plush under my wet shoes when I stepped back beside Rosa’s chair.
Daniel’s coworkers were frozen around the island.
One woman held a champagne flute halfway to her mouth.
A man in a navy blazer looked down at the screenshots on the coffee table and slowly set his drink down.
Lacey whispered, “Daniel?”
He reached for his shirt buttons.
His fingers missed the first one.
“Everyone needs to calm down.”
Marisol laughed once.
No humor.
Just air.
“You left Mom with twelve thousand eight hundred sixty dollars in unpaid care bills and a note.”
Daniel’s jaw tightened.
“That is between Claudia and me.”
“No,” Marisol said. “You put Mom’s name on those invoices.”
Rosa made a small sound.
I turned toward her.
Her hands had begun to shake. Not from fear this time. From the effort of sitting upright, of looking at the son who had driven away at dawn and expected his mother to disappear neatly from his schedule.
I adjusted the blanket over her knees.
“Breathe slow,” I said.
She nodded without looking away from Daniel.
The lawyer opened her briefcase.
“My name is Priya Shah,” she said. “I represent Mrs. Rosa Mercer and Ms. Marisol Mercer in matters concerning financial exploitation, elder care abandonment, and property preservation.”
Lacey’s head snapped toward Daniel.
“Elder care what?”
Daniel pointed at me.
“She’s twisting everything.”
Priya placed one document on the island.
Then another.
Then a third.
The paper made soft, final sounds against the marble.
“On March 3, Daniel Mercer authorized payment for this apartment using a joint marital account.”
Another document.
“On March 17, he stopped paying the licensed home health aide assigned to his mother.”
Another.
“On April 2, he transferred $9,300 from the account used for his mother’s medication and care reimbursements.”
Another.
“On April 9, he texted Ms. Lacey Grant, quote, ‘Claudia won’t let Mom miss anything. She’s too trained.’”
Lacey stepped back.
Her heel touched glass.
The wine under her foot left a red crescent on the floor.
Daniel lunged toward the documents.
Marisol moved first.
She set the suitcase between him and the island.
Not hard.
Just enough.
“Try it,” she said.
Daniel stopped.
That was new.
Marisol had always been the easy sister in his stories. Dramatic. Emotional. Bad with money. The one who “couldn’t handle Mom.” He had used those words for years while letting me handle injections, bills, appointments, rashes, pressure socks, late-night confusion, and the panic in Rosa’s eyes whenever her sugar dropped too low.
But Marisol’s hand was steady now.
Her suitcase stood upright like a witness.
Daniel looked at it.
“What’s in there?”
She unzipped the front pocket and pulled out a worn blue sweater.
Rosa’s sweater.
The one Daniel said had been donated by mistake.
Rosa reached for it.
“My blue one.”
Marisol walked to her mother and placed it in her lap.
“I kept everything you thought was gone,” she said.
Rosa pressed the sweater to her chest.
The room breathed differently.
Daniel swallowed.
“Marisol, I can explain.”
“You already did,” she said. “For ten years.”
Emily flinched at that number.
Lacey turned toward her.
“Ten years?”
Emily looked at me first.
Not Daniel.
Me.
As if asking permission to exist in the room.
I nodded once.
She stepped forward.
Her hands were bare. No rings. Short nails. A small scar ran across the back of one thumb. Her coat was old but brushed clean, the cuffs shiny from wear.
“My son is nine,” she said.
The silence after that had weight.
Daniel closed his eyes.
Lacey stared at him.
“You have a child?”
Daniel opened his mouth.
No sound.
One of the guests at the island whispered, “Oh my God.”
Emily reached into her purse and removed a folded photo.
She did not hand it to Daniel.
She handed it to Rosa.
Rosa took it with both trembling hands.
A boy smiled from the picture, missing one front tooth, holding a baseball glove too big for him.
Rosa’s lips parted.
“He looks like Danny.”
Emily’s eyes filled, but she kept her voice low.
“His name is Mateo.”
Rosa touched the photo with one finger.
“My grandson.”
Daniel said, “Mom—”
Rosa lifted her hand.
Just two inches.
Enough to stop him.
For once, he stopped.
The oxygen machine wasn’t here, but I still heard it in my head. That soft bedroom hum. The sound that had filled my mornings while Daniel sent champagne emojis from this apartment.
Priya took out another folder.
“Mr. Mercer, we also have documentation showing you have been representing your mother’s house as a future asset in private communications.”
Daniel’s face changed again.
The house.
Not the affair.
Not Lacey.
Not even Emily.
The house.
The one thing his father had left behind.
A brick bungalow in Oak Park with narrow stairs, rosebushes along the fence, and a basement that smelled like laundry soap and old tools. Daniel had complained about it for years.
Too old.
Too much upkeep.
Too valuable to “waste” on sentiment.
Rosa had signed nothing because I had hidden the notary appointment card.
That was in the blue folder too.
At 1:22 a.m., Daniel had texted Lacey:
Once the old lady is gone, we sell Mom’s house and start clean.
He thought “gone” meant death.
Priya knew “gone” could also mean removed.
Ignored.
Placed somewhere cheap.
Forgotten.
The lawyer turned one document around so Daniel could see the heading.
PETITION FOR EMERGENCY CONSERVATORSHIP REVIEW AND PROPERTY INJUNCTION.
Daniel stared.
“You can’t do that.”
Priya’s expression did not move.
“We filed at 1:05 p.m.”
His eyes shot to me.
I held up my phone.
“While Rosa napped.”
Marisol added, “While I packed.”
Emily said nothing.
That made Daniel look at her.
“You have no right to be here.”
Emily’s face tightened.
“I know.”
Lacey turned on him.
“Daniel.”
He ignored her.
He pointed at Emily.
“You and I had an arrangement.”
Rosa’s head lifted.
“What arrangement?”
Emily’s jaw worked once.
“He paid rent sometimes,” she said. “Then stopped. Then started again when Mateo asked why his dad never came to school.”
Daniel’s coworker in the navy blazer muttered, “Jesus.”
Daniel snapped toward him.
“Get out.”
Nobody moved at first.
Then chairs scraped.
Guests grabbed purses, coats, phones. The party drained toward the hallway in embarrassed silence. One woman paused near Rosa.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered.
Rosa looked at her.
“For what?”
The woman had no answer.
She left.
The door clicked shut behind the last guest at 12:04 p.m.
The apartment felt larger after that.
Colder.
Rain streaked down the windows, turning the city into broken silver lines. The jazz playlist ended, and the speaker made a soft chime before silence took over.
Only family remained.
And Lacey.
She stood near the sofa in my robe, arms crossed, red polish bright against cream silk.
Her voice was smaller now.
“Daniel, you told me your mother was in assisted living.”
Rosa looked at him.
Daniel rubbed his forehead.
“She practically was. Claudia handled everything.”
I smiled then.
Not wide.
Just enough.
“That was your whole plan.”
He looked at me.
“You loved being needed.”
“No,” I said. “I was useful.”
He flinched.
Not because the word hurt.
Because it was accurate.
Marisol opened the suitcase fully.
Inside were files.
Not clothes.
Files tied with rubber bands.
Medical bills.
Bank statements.
Copies of checks.
Printed text messages.
A copy of Rosa’s original deed.
And on top, a leather-bound photo album with cracked corners.
Rosa reached toward it.
Marisol placed it in her lap.
“This is why I came,” she said softly.
Rosa opened the album with unsteady fingers.
The first page had a photo of Daniel at eight years old on a bicycle. Marisol at ten holding a popsicle. Rosa and her husband standing behind them in front of the Oak Park house.
Rosa touched her late husband’s face.
“He loved that porch.”
Daniel’s voice turned sharp.
“Can we not do this sentimental nonsense right now?”
Rosa closed the album.
The sound was quiet.
Thick.
She looked at him.
“When your father died, you cried into my apron for two days.”
Daniel looked away.
Rosa continued.
“I sold my wedding bracelet to pay your business school deposit.”
He stiffened.
“Mom—”
“I watched Claudia sleep in a chair beside my bed because you had a conference in Miami.”
His mouth tightened.
“That conference mattered.”
Rosa’s voice did not rise.
“So did I.”
Nobody spoke.
The rain tapped harder.
Lacey’s face had gone still in a new way. Not pity. Calculation. She was adding timelines, bills, lies, and rent payments. She looked at Daniel the way a woman looks at a bridge after seeing the cracks under the paint.
“You said Claudia was cold,” she said.
Daniel turned slowly.
“This is not the time.”
“You said she wouldn’t let you breathe.”
His eyes narrowed.
“Lacey.”
She glanced down at the robe.
Then at me.
Her hand went to the belt.
For a second, I thought she might apologize.
She didn’t.
But she untied it.
Underneath, she wore a black slip dress. She pulled the robe off and folded it over the back of a chair, careful not to let it touch the wine.
“I didn’t know it was hers,” she said.
Daniel laughed under his breath.
“Oh, don’t perform innocence now.”
Lacey’s eyes cut to him.
That tone had probably once made her feel chosen.
Now it made her useful too.
She picked up her phone from the counter.
Daniel stepped toward her.
“What are you doing?”
“Checking my lease.”
He stopped.
She scrolled.
Then looked up.
“My name isn’t on it.”
Daniel’s face hardened.
“I said I’d add you.”
“You said a lot.”
Priya looked at me.
I knew what came next.
The apartment was leased in Daniel’s name, paid from our joint account, furnished with purchases I had not approved, and filled with items missing from my house. My robe. Our espresso machine. The silver serving tray his mother had given us for our tenth anniversary. Two framed prints from our hallway. Even the heavy blue quilt from the guest room was folded over the armchair by the window.
I walked to the quilt and touched the corner.
Rosa had made it.
Every square hand-stitched before her fingers stiffened.
“This too?” I asked.
Daniel looked exhausted now.
Annoyed.
As if being exposed was rude because it interrupted his plans.
“It was just sitting in the closet.”
Rosa whispered, “I made that for your home.”
He didn’t look at her.
“I needed things here.”
Marisol bent and picked up a shard of broken glass with a napkin.
“No,” she said. “You needed two lives and one woman cleaning both.”
Daniel snapped.
“You don’t get to judge me. You left Mom to Claudia too.”
Marisol froze.
That one hit.
I saw it.
Her fingers tightened around the napkin until red wine soaked through.
Then she nodded.
“Yes.”
Daniel blinked.
Marisol looked at Rosa.
“I did. I was angry at you for years, Mom. I thought you chose him. I thought every time you called me, it was to ask me to forgive another thing he did.”
Rosa’s eyes filled.
Marisol swallowed.
“But Claudia called me yesterday.”
Daniel’s head turned toward me.
I said nothing.
“She sent me the bills,” Marisol continued. “The notes. The medication schedule. The photos of Mom’s room. The bank withdrawals. And she said one sentence.”
Daniel stared.
Marisol looked at him.
“She said, ‘Your mother is still alive, and your brother is planning like she isn’t.’”
The apartment seemed to shrink around him.
Priya placed a final document on the coffee table beside the divorce petition.
“This is a temporary care agreement,” she said. “Mrs. Mercer will not remain here. That was never Mrs. Claudia Mercer’s intention.”
Daniel exhaled, almost laughing.
“Then what is all this?”
I looked at Rosa.
She was holding Mateo’s photo in one hand and the blue sweater in the other.
“This,” I said, “is delivery of responsibility.”
His eyes narrowed.
“Meaning?”
“Meaning I wanted everyone you lied to in one room.”
Lacey’s phone stopped scrolling.
Marisol looked at me.
Emily folded her arms tighter.
I reached into the blue folder and pulled out the last page.
Daniel recognized it before I turned it around.
His face emptied.
“Claudia.”
It was not a bill.
Not a screenshot.
Not a legal petition.
It was Rosa’s signed statement.
Dictated at 10:32 a.m. while I packed her insulin.
Witnessed by our neighbor Mrs. Patel and her retired-notary sister.
Rosa Mercer revokes any informal authority previously granted to Daniel Mercer regarding her residence, finances, medical arrangements, or personal property.
Rosa’s signature shook across the bottom.
But it was hers.
Daniel stepped back.
“Mom, you don’t understand what you signed.”
Rosa lifted her eyes.
“I understood enough.”
His voice softened in the old way.
The son voice.
The one he used when he wanted money, forgiveness, or silence.
“Mom, Claudia is turning you against me.”
Rosa looked at him for a long time.
Then she said, “No, Danny. She washed me this morning.”
The words landed harder than any accusation.
“She dried my hair,” Rosa continued. “She packed my medicine. She brought my rosary. She remembered I cannot eat grapefruit.”
Daniel looked at the floor.
“She brought me to you,” Rosa said. “And you did not touch my hand.”
Lacey covered her mouth again.
This time, no performance.
Daniel’s face twisted.
“I was shocked.”
Rosa nodded.
“I was not.”
The room held still.
Then Emily stepped forward.
“I don’t want anything from this,” she said.
Daniel turned on her.
“Then why are you here?”
She flinched but stayed upright.
“Because Mateo asked last week if he had grandparents.”
Rosa’s breath caught.
Emily looked at her.
“I didn’t know what to say.”
Rosa pressed the photo against her chest.
“You say yes.”
Daniel shook his head.
“No.”
Everyone looked at him.
He pointed at Emily, then at Rosa.
“No. You don’t get to pull my mother into this.”
Marisol laughed softly.
“Your mother?”
Daniel’s eyes flashed.
“Yes. My mother. My family. My business.”
That was the first honest sentence he said all day.
My family.
My business.
Not people.
Property.
Priya closed her briefcase.
“Mrs. Mercer’s temporary care placement begins this evening with Ms. Marisol Mercer pending court review. Claudia is not legally obligated to continue unpaid care. Daniel, you will be served regarding reimbursement, marital asset misuse, and the injunction hearing.”
Daniel looked at me.
“You’re really divorcing me over this?”
I reached for my coat from the back of the chair.
“No.”
He blinked.
“I’m divorcing you because I finally brought your life to one address and saw there was no husband in it.”
His mouth opened.
No answer came.
At 1:18 p.m., the building manager arrived with security.
Not because I called.
Lacey did.
Daniel stared at her when the knock came.
She stood beside the door, now wearing her own coat, my robe folded over one arm.
“I want him out,” she told the manager.
Daniel laughed.
“This is my apartment.”
The manager looked at the tablet in his hand.
“Mr. Mercer, the lease has a morality and disturbance clause tied to corporate housing.”
Daniel blinked.
“Corporate?”
Lacey looked at him.
“My company arranged the discount.”
Priya’s eyebrow lifted slightly.
Lacey’s voice turned cold.
“You told me it was private.”
Daniel rubbed both hands over his face.
“Everybody stop.”
No one stopped.
Security entered.
The building manager stepped aside.
“Until review, guests need to leave.”
Daniel pointed at me.
“She’s not a guest. She forced her way in.”
The manager looked at the card statement in Priya’s hand, then at me.
“Mrs. Mercer?”
“Yes.”
His expression changed just enough.
“Then she has documented financial interest.”
Daniel cursed under his breath.
Rosa closed her eyes.
Marisol touched her shoulder.
At 1:36 p.m., Daniel walked out of apartment 1407 carrying no shoes, no jacket, only his phone and the shirt he had finally buttoned wrong.
The elevator doors opened.
He turned back once.
Not to Rosa.
Not to me.
To Lacey.
She stared at him from behind the security guard.
The doors closed on his face.
The apartment exhaled.
Lacey sank onto one of the bar stools, still holding my robe.
For a few seconds, no one spoke.
Then she placed the robe on the island.
“I’ll have it cleaned.”
I looked at it.
“No.”
Her eyes lifted.
I picked it up with two fingers and dropped it into the trash can beside the island.
Rosa made a tiny sound that might have been approval.
Marisol laughed under her breath.
Emily looked down, hiding the corner of a smile.
At 2:05 p.m., we left The Meridian.
Marisol pushed Rosa’s wheelchair.
Emily carried the blue sweater and the photo album.
Priya carried the documents.
I carried the blue folder, Rosa’s medication bag, and nothing of Daniel’s.
The lobby smelled like white orchids and floor wax. The valet who had stopped us earlier stared at the group coming out. His eyes caught Rosa in the wheelchair, then Marisol’s suitcase, then the lawyer’s briefcase.
He stepped back.
“Ma’am,” he said softly.
Rosa lifted her chin like she was entering church.
Outside, rain had slowed to mist.
The city sounded washed clean—tires hissing, horns muffled, footsteps wet against pavement.
Marisol’s car waited at the curb.
A ramp van.
She had rented it that morning.
Rosa noticed.
“You got this for me?”
Marisol bent to lock the wheelchair brakes.
“I should have gotten it years ago.”
Rosa touched her daughter’s cheek.
No big apology.
No speech.
Just fingers on skin.
Marisol’s eyes closed.
At 2:22 p.m., as we settled Rosa into the van, my phone buzzed.
Daniel.
Where am I supposed to go?
I stared at the message.
Then at the glass tower behind me.
Fourteen floors up, apartment 1407 was a rectangle of pale light and bad choices.
Another text came.
Claudia answer me.
Then another.
You can’t just abandon me.
I showed Marisol.
She read it, then looked at her mother.
Rosa was watching rain bead on the window, Mateo’s photo still in her lap.
Marisol handed the phone back.
“What are you going to say?”
I typed one sentence.
You’re better at it anyway.
Then I blocked him.
At 5:40 p.m., we reached Marisol’s townhouse in Evanston.
It smelled like chicken soup, clean blankets, and the lavender candle burning on the kitchen counter. Not the heavy artificial kind. Real lavender, soft and herbal. A hospital bed had been set up in the first-floor den. A walker stood beside it. Pill organizers lined the dresser. A framed photo of Rosa’s late husband sat by the lamp.
Rosa saw it and pressed both hands to her mouth.
Marisol’s voice shook.
“I asked Claudia what you needed.”
Rosa turned to me.
I shrugged, suddenly tired.
“You like the lamp on the left side.”
Rosa laughed.
Then cried.
Then laughed again.
Emily stood near the doorway, unsure whether to enter this new family arrangement. Her shoes were wet. Her coat sleeves were too long. She held Mateo’s photo like she might be asked to return it.
Rosa looked at her.
“Bring him Sunday.”
Emily’s face crumpled.
“Are you sure?”
Rosa held out one hand.
“I have been a grandmother for nine years without knowing. I’m late.”
Emily crossed the room and took her hand.
At 6:00 p.m., Rosa’s medication alarm chimed.
For once, I did not move first.
Marisol did.
She checked the binder, opened the gray pouch, read the label twice, and handed Rosa the correct pills with applesauce.
Rosa swallowed.
Then looked at me.
“You trained her fast.”
I smiled.
“She reads directions.”
Marisol rolled her eyes.
“Don’t make me emotional. I’ll mess up the insulin.”
The kitchen smelled warmer after that.
Soup simmered. Rain tapped softly against the back windows. Somewhere upstairs, a dryer tumbled towels. My shoulders began to ache in places I had stopped noticing years ago.
At 7:12 p.m., Priya called.
I stepped onto the back porch.
The wood was damp under my socks. The air tasted cold and metallic from the rain.
“Daniel has retained counsel,” she said.
“Already?”
“He has also claimed you kidnapped his mother.”
I looked through the window.
Rosa was sitting in the den, blue sweater around her shoulders, laughing at something Marisol had said.
“Good,” I said.
Priya paused.
“Good?”
“He put it in writing.”
A small silence.
Then Priya said, “Yes. He did.”
By 8:30 p.m., Daniel’s claim had triggered the emergency welfare review he thought would scare us.
By 9:05 p.m., a social worker arrived at Marisol’s townhouse.
By 9:22 p.m., she had reviewed Rosa’s medication setup, sleeping arrangement, statement, and the blue folder.
By 9:41 p.m., she asked Rosa one question.
“Mrs. Mercer, do you feel safe here?”
Rosa sat straighter.
Her hair was still thin and gray from the towel I had used that morning, but someone—Marisol—had brushed it smooth.
She looked at me.
Then at Marisol.
Then at Emily.
Then down at Mateo’s photo.
“Yes,” she said. “For the first time in a long time, my son is not deciding what safe means.”
The social worker wrote that down.
At 10:08 p.m., she left.
At 10:16 p.m., Priya texted:
Daniel’s complaint damaged his own position. Do not respond to him. Hearing Monday 9:00 a.m.
I sat at Marisol’s kitchen table with my hands around a mug of tea I had not tasted.
My phone was quiet now.
Blocked numbers make a special kind of silence.
Across the hall, Rosa slept under a clean quilt. Her oxygen machine hummed beside the bed. The sound no longer filled an entire house. It was just a machine helping an old woman breathe.
Marisol sat across from me.
“You can stay tonight.”
I shook my head.
“I need to go home.”
Her face softened.
“Is it still home?”
I thought of the kitchen table.
The note.
The empty mug.
The menthol smell in the bedroom.
The stack of sheets still in the washer.
Daniel’s shoes by the garage door.
The house where I had become reliable enough to be abandoned.
“No,” I said.
“But I need to collect what’s mine.”
At 11:03 p.m., I unlocked my front door.
The house was dark.
Cold coffee still sat in the pot. Burnt toast crumbs remained on the counter. The washing machine had stopped mid-cycle, heavy with wet sheets. The note was exactly where I had left it that morning.
Take care of my mom. You’re better at it anyway.
I stood over it.
Then opened the drawer, took out a clear plastic evidence sleeve from the pack Priya had given me, and slid the note inside.
The paper made a soft whisper as it sealed.
Not trash.
Evidence.
At 11:18 p.m., I carried Daniel’s shoes to the porch.
Then his golf clubs.
Then two boxes of files.
Then the framed business award he loved more than most people.
Rain misted over everything.
At 11:46 p.m., headlights swept across the driveway.
A rideshare stopped at the curb.
Daniel stepped out wearing the same wrong-buttoned shirt from the apartment, hair damp, face carved with rage.
He saw his things on the porch.
Then he saw the note sealed in plastic in my hand.
“What the hell are you doing?”
I locked the front door behind me from the outside.
The deadbolt turned with a clean click.
His eyes dropped to the key in my hand.
“Claudia.”
I placed his house key in the mailbox.
“Your sister gets copies in eight minutes,” I said.
His face changed.
He remembered the apartment.
The doorbell.
The glass.
The woman he hid.
The mother he left.
The line that had stopped him from grabbing papers once already.
This time, there was no marble island.
No Lacey.
No guests.
No music.
Just rain, porch light, wet golf clubs, and the woman he had mistaken for a cleanup crew.
Daniel looked past me into the dark house.
“Where am I supposed to sleep?”
I opened my car door.
The inside smelled like Rosa’s lavender sweater and the medical wipes still tucked in the side pocket.
I looked at him once.
Then at the note in my hand.
“Handle it,” I said.
At 11:52 p.m., I drove away.
In the rearview mirror, Daniel stood on the porch surrounded by everything he had left behind.
For once, none of it was mine to carry.