“You have forty-eight hours to vacate the premises,” Jude added, standing up to loom over me with a look of pure indifference. “The locks will be changed on Thursday morning, so I suggest you start packing your things now.”
I didn’t argue or scream, because a decade of caregiving had taught me to save my energy for things that actually mattered. I simply turned around, walked up the stairs to the guest room I had occupied for years, and packed a single suitcase with my bare essentials.
As I walked out into the freezing Michigan night, I felt the small, sealed envelope tucked into my inner pocket. It was a letter that my mother-in-law, Martha, had pressed into my hand three days before she took her final breath.
“Do not open this until the dirt is over me, Serena,” she had whispered, her voice a mere rattle in her chest. “They will show their true faces soon enough, and you will need what is inside.”
I drove to a flickering motel on the outskirts of the city, the neon sign buzzing like a trapped insect in the dark. The room smelled of industrial cleaner and old cigarettes, but it was the first place in years where no one expected me to be anything other than myself.