The morning after Captain Ethan Hale’s military funeral, the house felt like a museum that had decided to close.
My cheeks still carried the salt-line of yesterday’s tears, and my black dress clung to me like it had teeth. I drove on autopilot through our quiet North Carolina neighborhood, past lawns Ethan used to mow in crooked stripes because he insisted it “looked human.”
Our driveway was crowded.
A white cargo van idled near the curb. Cardboard boxes were stacked like a moving-day skyline along the porch. Two men I didn’t recognize carried a dresser down the steps—our dresser, the one Ethan and I assembled at midnight while laughing at the instructions.