Tuesday Was Supposed to Be Ordinary
My name is Margaret. I’m forty-three years old.
Divorced. Permanently tired. And, for most of the past five years, one unexpected expense away from falling apart.
My ex-husband, Daniel, left when our son, Josh, was eleven.
He didn’t leave with a dramatic argument or a final apology. He packed two suitcases while I was at work, cleared most of our savings account, and left a note on the kitchen counter.
“I’m sorry. I can’t do this anymore.”
That was all.
He left me with a mortgage, unpaid bills, and a little boy who stood in the hallway staring at his father’s empty closet.
Josh never cried in front of me.
He simply became quieter.
Before Daniel left, Josh had been the kind of child who filled every room he entered. He built impossible towers out of cereal boxes, sang loudly in the shower, and asked so many questions that I sometimes had to beg him for five minutes of silence.
Afterward, he stopped asking questions.
He did his homework. He cleaned his room. He never caused trouble.
Everyone told me I was lucky to have such a responsible son.
But responsibility can be a disguise.
Sometimes, a child becomes easy because he has learned that the adults around him are already carrying too much.
So I created routines.
Dinner at six.
Homework at seven.
Phones away by ten.
Saturday morning grocery shopping.
Sunday pancakes.
Safe. Predictable. Ordinary.
And Tuesday was supposed to be exactly that.
The washing machine was buzzing in the basement. A pot of pasta sauce simmered on the stove. I was standing at the kitchen counter, opening an envelope from the electric company, when the front door swung open.
“Mom?” Josh called.
There was something strange in his voice.
Not fear.
Not panic.
Determination.
“Kitchen,” I answered, still looking at the bill.
“I need to tell you something.”
I sighed and set the envelope down.
At sixteen, Josh was taller than I was. He had inherited Daniel’s red hair and stubborn jaw, but his eyes were mine—gray, watchful, and unable to hide the truth for very long.
When I turned toward him, however, he wasn’t standing in the kitchen.
He had already gone upstairs.
“Josh?”
No answer.