Chapter 1: The Hand That Wouldn’t Let Go
Elena Marsh had learned to read dying the way other people read weather.
She could tell, most mornings, whether it would be a good day or a bad one just by the sound of Margaret Calloway’s breathing before she even opened the bedroom door. Today it was slow. Even. A good day.
“You’re late,” Margaret said, without opening her eyes.
“Four minutes,” Elena said, setting down her bag. “The bridge was backed up.”
“Four minutes is four minutes I could have died alone.”
“You’ve said that every morning for six months, and every morning you’ve been very much alive to complain about it.”
The corner of Margaret’s mouth twitched. It was the closest thing to a smile the old woman allowed herself before ten a.m.
Elena had been coming to the Calloway estate three days a week since March — an arrangement through the hospice agency that was supposed to be temporary, then somehow wasn’t. She checked vitals, managed medication, kept Margaret comfortable in the enormous house that always smelled faintly of lemon polish and old paper. The family — what little of it visited — treated Elena the way people treat furniture they’ve grown used to stepping around.
Margaret was different. Margaret asked questions.
“Do you have someone waiting for you?” she’d asked once, in April. “At home. Someone who worries if you’re late.”
“Just my neighbor’s cat,” Elena had said. “He worries about food, not me.”
Margaret hadn’t laughed. She’d just looked at Elena for a long moment, the way she looked at contracts before she signed them, like she was searching for something written in fine print.
That was the thing about Margaret Calloway. Underneath the sharp tongue and the eighty-two years of practiced control, she watched people. Really watched them. Elena had spent her whole life being looked past — by foster families counting down until she aged out, by coworkers who forgot her name by the second shift — and something about being seen by this impossible, imperious woman had quietly become the best part of Elena’s week.
She checked Margaret’s oxygen levels, adjusted the pillow behind her, and reached for the blood pressure cuff.
“Leave it,” Margaret said.
“Margaret—”
“I said leave it.” Her voice had an edge Elena hadn’t heard before. Not irritation. Something closer to urgency. “Sit down. I need to tell you something, and I need you to actually listen instead of poking me with your machines.”
Elena set the cuff down slowly. In six months, Margaret had never once asked her to sit.
“Okay,” Elena said, lowering herself into the chair beside the bed. “I’m listening.”
Margaret’s hand found hers — thin, cold, surprisingly firm. Her eyes, when she finally opened them, were wet in a way Elena had never seen before, not even during the worst nights.
“There’s something you need to know before I go,” Margaret said. “Something I should have told you months ago. Something I should have told you your whole—”
She stopped herself. Elena felt the grip on her hand tighten.
“Margaret, you’re scaring me.”
“Good,” Margaret whispered. “You should be scared. It’s a frightening thing, the truth, when you’ve waited this long to say it.”
She took a breath that rattled in a way Elena didn’t like. Not yet, Elena thought. Not like this, mid-sentence, with whatever she needs to say still stuck in her throat.
“Elena, your mother—”
The monitor beside the bed let out a single sharp beep.
Margaret’s eyes rolled back. Her hand went slack in Elena’s.
“Margaret? Margaret!”
Elena was on her feet before she’d finished the name, hitting the call button, tilting Margaret’s chin, checking for breath with the automatic, practiced calm of someone who had done this a hundred times for a hundred other patients and had never once, not once, felt her own hands shake like this.
Somewhere down the hall, she could hear footsteps. Someone from the family, finally paying attention.
But all Elena could hear, over and over, was the sentence Margaret never got to finish.
Your mother—
Your mother, what?