You stopped answering most messages.
Instead, you met with an attorney, changed your locks, moved out for two months, then moved back only after police released the house. You bought a new mattress. A new bed frame. New sheets. You repainted the bedroom because the old color felt complicit. You threw away the lavender spray and the essential oils and the decorative pillows and the black rug and anything that belonged to a version of your life built around explaining away rot.
Still, the smell haunted you.
Trauma can be embarrassingly literal like that. Weeks later, a damp towel in the laundry basket would make your pulse race. A whiff of mold from an overwatered plant at the dentist’s office would send nausea crawling up your throat. You learned quickly that the body stores fear without needing your permission.
The real break came six months later.
Detective Harper called on a Tuesday morning while you were grading papers at the dining table. You had gone back to teaching by then, part-time at first, because children require such immediate, practical presence that sometimes they drag you back into being alive by force.
“We found her,” Harper said.
For one second you didn’t understand who she meant.
Then your pen slipped out of your fingers.
Elena’s remains had been discovered on undeveloped land outside Flagstaff after a survey crew reported disturbed soil near an old service road. Weather and time had done what weather and time do, but there was enough. Enough to identify her. Enough forensic correlation between location history, witness timelines, and items tied to Miguel to upgrade suspicion into charges that did not leave room for euphemism.
Continued on next page
For complete cooking times, go to the next page or click the Open button (>), and don't forget to SHARE with your Facebook friends.