Dana turned the envelope over, thumb tracing the wax seal—crimson, unmarked, as if it had been pressed by a ring she didn’t recognize. She lived alone now, in the small house by the salt marsh where the fog rolled in each evening like a held breath. The mail came at four. By 4:03, she had the letter open and the kitchen light on, even though the sun was still out.
Dana’s throat tightened. She did remember. The cobbler had been perfect—brown sugar and cinnamon, still warm from the oven. Her sister, Elena, had cried the next morning when she found the empty dish. Dana had shrugged and said, “Mom must have thrown it out.”
Look under the bed.
The letter arrived on a Tuesday, tucked between a pizza coupon and a final notice for a bill she’d already paid. No return address. Just her name in looping, old-fashioned cursive: Dana Vespoli dear.
A floorboard creaked in the hallway. Dana didn’t move. She thought of the stray cat— Dear, she called him —who had stopped showing up three days ago. She thought of the way the fog had been pressing against her windows earlier than usual, thick as cotton.
Dana Vespoli dear, she whispered to herself, the way her grandmother used to begin every scolding. And then she got up, very slowly, and walked toward the bedroom, leaving the letter on the table beside the wilting geraniums and the unpaid bill.
Dana’s hand went cold. She set the paper down, looked toward the back door. Locked. She was sure she’d locked it. But then again, she’d been forgetting things lately—the way her mother had started to forget, before the end.
Dana turned the envelope over, thumb tracing the wax seal—crimson, unmarked, as if it had been pressed by a ring she didn’t recognize. She lived alone now, in the small house by the salt marsh where the fog rolled in each evening like a held breath. The mail came at four. By 4:03, she had the letter open and the kitchen light on, even though the sun was still out.
Dana’s throat tightened. She did remember. The cobbler had been perfect—brown sugar and cinnamon, still warm from the oven. Her sister, Elena, had cried the next morning when she found the empty dish. Dana had shrugged and said, “Mom must have thrown it out.” dana vespoli dear
Look under the bed.
The letter arrived on a Tuesday, tucked between a pizza coupon and a final notice for a bill she’d already paid. No return address. Just her name in looping, old-fashioned cursive: Dana Vespoli dear. Dana turned the envelope over, thumb tracing the
A floorboard creaked in the hallway. Dana didn’t move. She thought of the stray cat— Dear, she called him —who had stopped showing up three days ago. She thought of the way the fog had been pressing against her windows earlier than usual, thick as cotton. By 4:03, she had the letter open and
Dana Vespoli dear, she whispered to herself, the way her grandmother used to begin every scolding. And then she got up, very slowly, and walked toward the bedroom, leaving the letter on the table beside the wilting geraniums and the unpaid bill.
Dana’s hand went cold. She set the paper down, looked toward the back door. Locked. She was sure she’d locked it. But then again, she’d been forgetting things lately—the way her mother had started to forget, before the end.