He Punched The Wall Beside His Elderly Father-In-Law’s Face-tantan

The kitchen still smelled like burnt toast when Albert Hughes heard the key turn in his front door.

He knew the sound before he saw who it was.

Not because the lock was loud.

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Because Jason never knocked.

Albert sat at the small kitchen table with both hands around his coffee mug, watching the thin ribbon of steam rise into the morning light.

At eighty-eight, his mornings had become careful things.

He counted pills before breakfast.

He kept one hand on the counter when he moved from the stove to the sink.

He wrote appointments on the calendar in block letters because his eyesight was not what it used to be.

But he still made his own coffee.

He still watered Margaret’s basil on the balcony.

He still opened the blinds every morning so the little American flag taped inside the front window could catch the light.

That apartment in San Diego was not much to anyone else.

A two-bedroom place with old cabinets, a narrow balcony, and a refrigerator that hummed too loudly at night.

But to Albert, every corner had a memory pressed into it.

Margaret had chosen the yellow curtains because she said the kitchen needed to wake up happy.

She had labeled the breaker box in blue ink because Albert always forgot which switch went where.

She had kept extra grocery bags folded under the sink, tucked birthday candles in the junk drawer, and taped a recipe for meatloaf inside one cabinet door.

Even after she died, Albert never removed it.

Some things stayed because taking them down felt too much like admitting the person was gone.

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