I packed what belonged to me.

Really belonged.

Not the throw pillows Molina had brought back from Target. Not the bar cart Caleb insisted looked more “grown‑up” than my old bookshelf.

My clothes. My dishes. The quilt Paul’s mother had made for us as a wedding gift. The framed photo of sixteen‑year‑old Caleb, braces flashing, mud on his knees from a soccer game.

Paul’s leather chair.

I thought about leaving it behind, but the idea of strangers sitting in the one seat that still held the outline of his body made my stomach twist.

So I hired a couple of guys from a moving company that didn’t ask questions, and I watched them carry that chair out through the front door.

“What about the rest of this stuff?” one of them asked, nodding toward the dining set, the couches, the bedroom furniture upstairs.

“Those belong to my son and his wife,” I said. “They’re going into storage.”

I labeled their boxes carefully: KITCHEN – CALEB & MOLINA. CLOTHES – CALEB. OFFICE. LINENS – UPSTAIRS.

I rented a storage unit off the interstate, paid a year in advance, and slid the contract into the folder with my other documents.

Joanna would have the key and the code.

Legally, I didn’t owe them any of it.