This should have been an ordinary morning, the kind my mother had imagined for years without ever asking for it out loud, a quiet routine filled with coffee on the porch, salt air drifting through open windows, and my father pretending to read the paper while secretly watching the horizon as if it might tell him something about the life he had spent building.

Instead, my mother, Doris, stood in the gravel driveway wearing soft house slippers and a lavender cardigan, her mascara running in uneven lines down her cheeks as she cried with a force that made her press her fist against her mouth to stop the sound from escaping.

“This is not your house,” Russell Grant said again, louder this time, as though my father’s silence came from confusion rather than humiliation. “You cannot just walk in whenever you feel like it.”

When my mother called me, her voice trembled so violently that for a brief moment I believed someone had died, because that is the only kind of call that usually sounds like that.

“Marcus,” she said, struggling to keep her words steady. “You need to come right now.”