I had paid for medications that cost more than this in a single month. I had never once kept track.
Now every cent mattered.
The days blurred together.
I slept in short bursts, waking whenever the heater kicked on or someone slammed a door nearby.
During the day, I sat on the bed and stared at the television without turning it on, listening to the hum of electricity in the walls.
I thought about calling Ryan. Then I dismissed it. There was nothing left to say.
I thought about calling friends I hadn’t spoken to in years. Then I realized I wouldn’t know how to explain what had happened without sounding like I was asking for something.
I had spent too long being the one who handled things. Asking felt foreign.
Anger came in waves, sharp and sudden, then receded just as quickly.
It hit when I thought about the word service, about how easily my life had been categorized and dismissed.
It hit when I imagined Ryan sleeping in the room where I had woken up every night to check on Margaret.
But the anger never stayed. What replaced it was something heavier.
A numbness that settled over me like a blanket, dulling everything it touched.
I wasn’t sad in the way grief movies show sadness. I was emptied out.
On the second night, I dreamed Margaret was calling for me.
I woke up gasping, my heart racing, my body already moving before my mind caught up.
It took a few seconds to remember where I was. The motel. The bed. The heater rattling.
No baby monitor. No footsteps down the hall. No one needed me.
The realization brought an unexpected ache, sharp and sudden.
For ten years, my purpose had been defined by someone else’s survival. Now that was gone.
And I didn’t know who I was supposed to be without it.
By the third day, the room felt smaller, the walls pressing in as if they had moved closer overnight.
I paced the length of the carpet back and forth, counting my steps.
I had nothing to lose anymore. The house was gone. The family I thought I had was gone.
My past had been reduced to a transaction. My future was a question mark.
I stopped in the middle of the room and looked under the bed. The bag was still there. The envelope was still inside, untouched.
I sat down and pulled it out, resting it on my lap.
The paper was thick, the edges worn slightly where Margaret’s fingers had held it.
I could see her handwriting faintly pressed into the surface, the imprint of a name, a few words written with effort.
She had made me promise.
I remembered the weight of her hand on mine, the seriousness in her eyes on one of the rare days when the medication haze had lifted.
Don’t open it until I’m gone.
I had kept that promise through the funeral, through the drive home, through the moment they told me to leave my own house.
I had kept it when every part of me wanted answers.
Now, sitting alone in a motel room that smelled like bleach and loneliness, I understood why she had waited.
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