His smile tightened.
“You’re grieving. This isn’t the time to make emotional choices.”
I looked past him toward the back window. Victor’s shelter sat behind the fence, partially hidden by weeds.
“Funny,” I said. “Mom told me the same thing about you.”
Mark’s hand froze on a cardboard box.
“What did Stephanie say?”
“That if you came around, I shouldn’t let you touch the blue box.”
For the briefest moment, something changed in his face.
Then he laughed.
“She was sick.”
“She was scared.”
“Of me?”
“You tell me.”
He glanced toward the relatives gathered in the living room before lowering his voice.
“Leave old pain buried, Fiona.”
The next morning, I cooked beef stew because it was the only meal I knew how to make without ruining it. I packed it into one of Mom’s plastic containers and drove back to her house.
The first thing I noticed was that Victor’s shelter was empty.
The blanket had been folded.
The coffee cans were gone.
Even the firewood had been stacked neatly.
“Victor?” I called.
“Fiona.”
I turned around.
Victor stood near the back steps wearing a clean dark coat. Beside him sat a black SUV I had never seen before.
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My stomach sank.
“Whose car is that?”
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