At first she moved through the farmhouse with the tentative guilt of someone who had briefly stood on the wrong side of something important and was still learning how to come back without making the wound about herself. But day by day the place got under her skin the way it had gotten under mine. She watched the daily videos with me every morning. She helped Maren sort legal packets at the dining room table. She let Ellis show her how to tack up one of the quarter horses. She wandered the house touching objects Joshua had chosen with the reverence of a daughter discovering the scale of a father’s hidden tenderness.
“Did you have any idea?” she asked me one night on the porch as snow clouds gathered in the western sky and winter announced itself in the wind. “Any suspicion at all that he was planning all this?”
I thought about that honestly.
“There were things,” I said. “The will update three years ago. The way he started photographing ordinary days. His sudden refusal to postpone anything personal. But I thought he was hitting that age where people start trying to prove to themselves they still have time.”