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Six months later, the house smelled like coffee and bacon in the mornings instead of stale smoke and resentment.
Leo sat at the kitchen table in pajama pants, working through fourth-grade fractions with the dramatic suffering only a ten-year-old boy can bring to math homework. He had color back in his face now. He slept through storms. He laughed without checking first to see if someone might punish him for being loud.
I stood at the stove with a practiced rhythm I had worked hard to build. Cooking from the chair had taken time, and a fair amount of swearing, but by then I had a system. Everything had a place. Everything had a reason.
I paused with the spatula in my hand.
In the months since that night, Frank and Chloe had landed in a cramped two-bedroom apartment across town. Chloe had gotten a receptionist job and, according to neighborhood gossip, was learning the hard truth that shoes become less fun when you buy them with your own money. Frank was working mall security and blaming everyone but himself. They were miserable. They had learned nothing.
“Tell her she can visit,” I said finally. “Just her. And tell her Chloe’s shoe collection stays in the car.”
“I’m practical.”
He called once a week. Sometimes to yell. Sometimes to beg. Sometimes to do both in the same message.
I looked at the screen and felt nothing. Not anger. Not satisfaction. Not grief. He had become what he truly was: a ghost from a former life who no longer had access to the living.
“Nope,” I said, putting a pancake onto his plate. “Breakfast outranks nonsense.”
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Later that morning, I rolled out onto the porch with a fresh mug of coffee. The air had that crisp edge Midwestern fall mornings get just before the first real cold sets in. I looked down the drive out of habit more than expectation.
Not a taxi. Not family.
Sarah.
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