I knew her, too, though I had never met her when it mattered. Back then, she was just “evidence he wasn’t alone.”
Now, the woman who had my sons’ eyes was standing on my porch like we were neighbors.
For a second, I was standing on the sidewalk again, staring at the blackened rubble that had been our house while a police officer spoke to me in a careful voice.
“We found signs your husband may not have been alone when the fire started. There was a woman with him,” he had said gently.
I was standing on the sidewalk again, staring at the blackened rubble.
“What do you mean, there was a woman?”
“The fire department found jewelry fragments alongside his watch. A neighbor reported seeing a woman arrive earlier this evening.”
“Oh, my God.” My knees had given out, and I’d crumpled to the sidewalk. “Are there any… survivors? Bodies?”
He shook his head. “I’m sorry, ma’am. The damage was too severe.”
“A neighbor reported seeing a woman arrive earlier this evening.”
That was all I got at first: a house in ruins and a husband presumed dead.
My entire life had turned into ash while I was on a business trip three states away.
I had nothing left after the fire except my grandmother’s lake house, two hours north. A week after I moved in, I got the call from social services.
The woman on the phone sounded careful.
“There are children involved.”
I sat down at my grandmother’s kitchen table. “What children?”
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