The Memory Card From My Parents’ Doorbell Changed Everything-Teptep

I thought I was walking into a normal favour for my sister.

I was wrong before I had even taken my coat off.

By the time I got to my parents’ street, the sky had gone grey in that quiet, colourless way it does just before evening settles properly.

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Their house sat there exactly as it always had: clipped hedge, small front step, porch light, familiar curtains.

Nothing looked dramatic.

That was what made the feeling in my stomach so hard to explain.

It was not fear yet.

It was the uneasy sensation that something had already happened and the house was waiting for me to notice.

I had bought grapes, butter, and a loaf of sourdough because that was the sort of stupidly specific thing I did when I wanted to feel like a good daughter.

The bag was still warm from the shop.

The smell of bread filled the car.

I remember thinking Mum would laugh and tell me off for wasting money on the expensive butter Dad claimed made no difference.

I never got to tease him about it.

The front garden was too neat.

That is the bit I keep returning to.

Dad was always the one who left the hose a little crooked by the garage door.

Mum always had a plant pot half-tilted near the step because she kept meaning to shift it when she had time.

That evening, everything was in place.

Too in place.

The porch swing was still.

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