She Found Her Bedroom Packed, Then Her Late Husband’s Warning Hit-Tep

I was gone for fifty-three minutes.

That is not a guess, because later I looked at the grocery receipt and the clock on my phone the way a person studies evidence after something impossible happens in her own hallway.

At 10:18 that Thursday morning, I paid for milk, cheddar, bananas, and one small paper bag of dark roast coffee at Russo’s Market.

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At 11:11, I unlocked my front door and found six cardboard boxes stacked outside the master bedroom.

The milk was cold enough to make the paper bag damp against my wrist.

The coffee smelled bitter and warm.

From inside my bedroom came the long, ugly scrape of furniture being dragged across hardwood.

For one strange second, my mind tried to make it ordinary.

Maybe Theodore had dropped something.

Maybe Marguerite had moved a chair.

Maybe one of the children had knocked over the laundry basket again.

Then I saw the labels.

Kitchen.

Linens.

Vincent’s closet.

Nightstand.

The word nightstand made the hallway tilt.

Not because the object was expensive, because it was not.

It was a small walnut table Vincent and I had bought at a yard sale in 1986, after our old one cracked down the middle during a move.

He had sanded it on the back porch, stained it too dark, apologized, and then insisted the darkness made it “look serious.”

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