The Quiet Life
My name is Susan, and I’m a 66-year-old retired nurse living alone in the cozy Michigan bungalow I once shared with my late husband, Tom. Every morning follows the same peaceful rhythm – I wake up at 6:30, brew a pot of coffee, and take my steaming mug out to the porch where the morning dew still clings to my hydrangeas. Tom and I bought this modest house during our first year of marriage, back when we were young and full of dreams. It’s not fancy – just a simple three-bedroom with worn hardwood floors and a kitchen that’s at least two decades behind the times – but it’s mine, filled with forty years of memories. This morning, while waiting for my volunteer shift at the hospital (I may be retired, but I can’t seem to stay away completely), I found myself flipping through our old photo albums. There’s Tom with his ridiculous mustache in the 80s. There we are painting the living room that awful olive green color we both somehow loved. The pictures tell our story – the life we built together, the home we created, the love we shared until his heart gave out five years ago. Sometimes I talk to him while I’m gardening, telling him about the new rosebush or how the tomatoes are coming along. The neighbors probably think I’m losing it, but honestly, I don’t care. When you’ve loved someone for four decades, they don’t just disappear from your life, even when they’re gone. What I didn’t know that morning, as I sipped my coffee and planned my day, was that the peaceful life I’d carefully rebuilt was about to be shattered by a single manila envelope.



























































