When I came home one October evening, there was a heavy black lock on the pantry door in my own kitchen. My daughter-in-law smiled and called it “a shared space.” I said nothing. At dawn, I quietly removed the lock, left a single handwritten note, and phoned my lawyer. By dinner, my son was carving roast chicken while I asked for one thing: the date they’d be moving out of the house I paid for alone.

When I came home one October evening, there was a heavy black lock on the pantry door in my own kitchen. My daughter-in-law smiled and called it “a shared space.” I said nothing. At dawn, I quietly removed the lock, left a single handwritten note, and phoned my lawyer. By dinner, my son was carving roast chicken while I asked for one thing: the date they’d be moving out of the house I paid for alone.

By the time I turned onto Elmwood Drive, the maples had gone that particular deep red that only happens in late October when the air has finally given up on pretending summer might return. The sky over Toronto was a dull pearl gray, low and heavy, and my little blue Corolla hummed along the familiar route like it could have driven it without me.

I parked in the same spot I had parked in for fourteen years, under the streetlamp that flickered twice before it came on, and sat there for a moment with my hands resting on the steering wheel. My knuckles looked older in the half-light—more like my mother’s than they used to.

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Đọc thê

Thirty-one years of nursing show up in the hands first. The rest of you goes soft and tired; the hands stay practical.

I picked up my work bag—still a habit, even though now it was only volunteer shifts at the community health centre instead of full twelve-hour days at St. Michael’s—and walked up the front path. The porch boards creaked in the same places they always had. Somewhere down the street a dog barked once and then thought better of it.

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