The front door used to be dull navy—chosen because it “hid dirt best.” Now it was charcoal gray with a brass knocker. Where the crooked brown welcome mat once sat, there was a pristine coir mat that read:
HOME SWEET HOME
I knocked.
Not gently.
Not cautiously.
I knocked like a son who had counted every one of the 1,095 days. Like someone who still believed he belonged.
The door opened—and the warmth I expected never came.
Linda stood there.
My stepmother.
Perfectly styled hair. Crisp silk blouse. Sharp eyes that inspected me like an inconvenience delivered by mistake.
For a brief moment, I thought she might flinch. Or soften. Or at least seem surprised.
She didn’t.
“You’re out,” she said flatly.
“Where’s my dad?” My voice sounded unfamiliar—rough, too loud.
Her lips tightened.
Then she said it.
“Your father died last year.”
The words hovered, unreal.
Buried.
A year ago.
My mind refused to accept it. I waited for clarification. For cruelty disguised as a joke.
But she didn’t blink.
“We live here now,” she added. “You should leave.”
The hallway behind her was unrecognizable. New furniture. New pictures. No sign of my father’s boots. No jacket. No smell of sawdust or coffee.
It was as if he had been erased.
And she held the eraser.