I imagined the moment they realized the doormat was gone, the porch furniture missing, their car absent from the driveway.

I imagined the first step into the house, the echo bouncing off empty walls.

The third voicemail was Molina.

Her voice was honeyed, just a touch too sweet.

“Hey, Lena, it’s Molina. We’re just… really worried. We came home and everything’s gone, and we found your note, and we just want to make sure you’re safe. Can you please call us? We’re family. We can work this out.”

Safe.

I looked around the little apartment.

The walls still smelled faintly of fresh paint. A secondhand lamp I’d bought that morning stood crooked on the end table. Out on the balcony, a bird hopped along the railing.

For the first time in a long time, I felt exactly that.

Safe.

I didn’t call back.

The last voicemail of the day came hours later.

Caleb again. His voice was tight, brittle.

“We talked to a lawyer,” he said. “You can’t just sell our home out from under us. You had no right. None. I don’t know what you think you heard, but you’ve made a huge mistake. Call me.”

He hung up without saying I love you.

I saved that one.