Mine never did.Seven years have passed since Ryan walked out of this house at dawn with Jack and Caleb, fishing rods loaded in the truck, promising they’d be home before dinner. I still catch myself in the old habit — glancing up when I hear the front door, listening for the specific noise of three people coming back from somewhere and needing to be fed.
They never came back.It’s just me and Lily now. She’s thirteen, all long arms and careful eyes and the particular quiet that grows in a child who has spent years watching her mother wait for something that doesn’t come.
I need to say something before I go further. The world gets very casual with words like stepmother when it wants to make someone’s grief sound smaller or less legitimate. I came into Jack and Caleb’s lives when they were two years old. I raised them. I know which one was afraid of thunderstorms and which one needed the light on and which one would eat anything put in front of him and which one required a ten-minute negotiation about vegetables. Not once did I think of them as anything other than mine. That matters here.
Ryan took the boys to Lake Monroe every summer. Just the three of them — out before sunrise, back in the evening smelling like sunscreen and fish they probably didn’t catch. Every year, Lily would stand at the back door in her pajamas and beg to come, and Ryan would kiss the top of her head and say the same thing.“You’re still too little for the boat, Peanut. Next year.”
What the Last Normal Morning Looked Like — and the Hours After When Anna Started Calling His Phone
The last fishing morning looked like every other one.
