She did not know yet what it was. She only knew that Thursday felt suddenly closer than it had before.
Tuesday passed, then Wednesday.
The house kept its rhythm. Mr. Caleb worked. Rebecca cleaned, cooked, and moved quietly through the rooms. They exchanged the usual words: “Good morning.” “Lunch is ready.” “Thank you.” “Good night.”
Everything on the surface was exactly as it had always been.
But something beneath the surface had shifted.
Rebecca could feel it, though she could not have said precisely what it was. A change in the air, maybe. The way Mr. Caleb sometimes paused a half second too long before answering her. The way he occasionally looked up from whatever he was doing when she entered a room, not sharply, not suspiciously, just looking as if checking something, as if confirming something to himself.
She noticed it the way she noticed everything: quietly, without reacting. She stored it in the back of her mind and kept working.
On Wednesday evening, on the bus home, she took out her phone and looked at nothing for a while. Then she put it away and looked out the window instead.
She thought about Thursday.
She thought about the envelope in her bedside drawer.