The 2:17 AM Message From Dead Rebecca Made The Water Tank Move-Tep

My neighbor Rebecca was buried yesterday at noon.

By 2:17 AM, her name was glowing on my phone.

That alone should have been impossible.

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The message should not have existed, because I had watched them lower her casket into the ground less than twelve hours earlier.

I had stood in the thin cemetery grass with my shoes sinking into the damp dirt while her sister cried in the exhausted way people cry when duty expects it.

Two neighbors prayed.

The priest said the words people say when there is nothing useful left to do.

I helped carry the casket, and I remember thinking it felt too light.

Not symbolically light.

Actually light.

Like Rebecca had been losing pieces of herself for years, and by the time death finally came, there was not much left for any of us to carry.

That was the first thing I thought about when I saw her contact name.

Rebe 2A.

The second thing I thought was that grief does strange things to a person.

The third thing I thought was that my phone had to be wrong.

Our building was old enough to make wrong things feel normal.

Pipes knocked in the walls.

Radiators hissed in winter even after the heat was shut off.

Doors stuck when it rained, and every hallway smelled like bleach, wet concrete, cheap detergent, and whatever dinner somebody was stretching across three days.

It was the kind of Chicago apartment building where everyone knew more than they admitted and said less than they knew.

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