Then I placed the old beach photograph on top.
Everything else—the furniture, the bookshelves, the worn armchair where I used to read while she and Daniel watched television, the kitchen tools I had bought when I first moved in to help with the baby—none of it mattered. It was just weight, and I had no interest in fighting over things.
I made the bed before leaving. Habit, I suppose. Then I went to the kitchen and set the house keys on the table. They made a small, sharp sound against the wood that echoed in the empty room.
At the front door, I stopped and looked around one last time. The house was dim, lit only by the small hallway lamp. Family photos lined the wall—Laura holding their son, Daniel smiling at the camera, the three of them beside a Christmas tree. In one or two of the older photos, I was there too, tucked off to the side like a supporting character.
“Goodbye, hija,” I whispered. “I hope… wherever you are, you don’t have to see this part.”