That’s it. That’s the whole story. Most people pause when I say it, waiting for me to smile or admit I’m kidding.
I never do.
The longer version begins on a quiet Tuesday, the kind of day so ordinary it almost feels painful to revisit. The sky was clear, late September warmth still lingering in the air. I was halfway through lunch at my desk, skimming emails about a permit, when my sister Hannah called.
Hannah never calls during work hours. She texts, leaves unfinished voice notes, sends random pictures—but she doesn’t call unless something is wrong.
I picked up immediately.
“You need to come home,” she said. “Right now.”
Her voice was controlled—too controlled. The kind people use when they’re holding panic back.
“What happened?”
“Just come, Ethan.”
I didn’t ask anything else. I grabbed my keys and left, driving faster than I should have along the narrow county road. I kept the radio off, gripping the wheel, trying not to imagine what I was about to find.