The first thing I saw was my bare ring finger. I was rinsing blueberries when I looked down and felt that old ache move through me all over again.
Then my son, Miles, called from the living room, “Mommy, somebody’s at the door.”
I opened it, and for one second I thought I was hallucinating.
“Mommy, somebody’s at the door.”
Patricia stood on my porch in a church dress, soaked at the hem, gripping her purse tightly. She was Luke’s mother. The same woman who had watched her son break me in front of a church full of people and then vanished like silence with lipstick on.
My first instinct was to shut the door.
She saw it in my face and begged. “Laurel. Please.”
