Old Man Warned Me Not To Open The Door, Then I Found The Box-Teptep

My husband worked nights, and an old man sleeping in my garden whispered, “Don’t open the door.”

Hours later, I found a box hidden inside our wall.

I can still remember the sound of the rain that night.

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Not heavy rain, not the sort that batters the windows and gives you something to complain about, but a thin, needling drizzle that settled on everything and made the front path shine under the security light.

The kettle had just clicked off in the kitchen.

A damp tea towel hung over the radiator.

The house smelt faintly of toast, washing-up liquid and old plaster, which I thought was just what houses smelled like when they had been lived in too long by two people who had stopped saying everything out loud.

My name is Kiera.

I was 43 years old, married to Thomas for fourteen years, and living in a two-storey house on the edge of town.

It was not grand, but it was ours in all the ways that mattered to me.

A narrow hallway with coats crowded on the hooks.

A small back garden where the rain collected in the dip near the fence.

A kitchen where the separate taps always annoyed me because you could never get the water properly warm without a little negotiation.

Every morning, I set up a little table by the front of the house and sold breakfast wraps, strong coffee and thick sandwiches to people heading to work.

It was not glamorous, but it kept me busy and kept a bit of money coming in.

Neighbours stopped for a chat.

Drivers waved.

People said I was cheerful, which was mostly true when I was outside.

Inside the house, cheerfulness had become something I put on like an apron.

Thomas worked at a furniture workshop.

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