The big accordion folder Sarah had made fun of—”Why do you keep every receipt? Are you hoarding paper?”—sat on my desk. I pulled it close, flipped through years of saved generosity. Wedding bills, car loan papers, furniture receipts with Sarah’s signature on them. Everything saved. Everything provable.

She’d called it hoarding. I called it proof.

My phone buzzed with a text from Danny.

“Mom, please don’t be mad. We can fix this.”

I didn’t answer. Let him wonder. Let him worry. Let him realize that the money purse had closed, that the free ride had ended, that doing bad things had consequences even when you’d spent years being protected from them.

By noon, my email made a sound.

Patterson and Smith.

“Mrs. Gray, we can see you tomorrow at 3. This needs immediate attention given the time involved.”

I typed back, “I’ll be there.”

Outside, the day had gotten warm, maybe 65°. Perfect fall weather. My neighbors were decorating for Thanksgiving, hanging wreaths and putting out those silly inflatable turkeys. Normal people getting ready for normal holidays with families who wanted them there.

I wasn’t “normal people” anymore.