She Came to My Porch Barefoot at Dawn, and Her Truth Changed Us-kimochi

At 6:00 in the morning, my coffee maker was making the kind of sound that suggests a small machine has finally lost respect for its owner.

The sky outside my blinds was pale gray, the way Portland looks before the city fully admits it is morning.

I was wearing sweatpants, one sock, and my hair was doing something that probably violated several workplace grooming policies.

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Then somebody knocked on my front door.

Not rang the bell.

Knocked.

Three soft knocks, spaced out like the person on the other side was already sorry for being there.

I opened the door ready to find a neighbor, a delivery mistake, or maybe a raccoon with excellent timing.

Instead, I found Natalie Brooks.

She was standing on my porch in last night’s black dress.

No coat.

No purse that I could see.

No makeup left except for one dark smudge under her right eye.

Her heels hung from two fingers, and her bare feet were red from the cold concrete.

The little American flag beside my mailbox snapped in the wind behind her, bright and strange against the gray morning.

For a second, neither of us said anything.

The coffee maker hissed behind me.

The heat clicked on somewhere in the hallway.

Then Natalie looked at me and said, “I need you to not make a joke.”

That was when I knew something was wrong.

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