For one second, I nearly ignored it. I had no room left for wrong numbers or phone surveys or anything else that wasted energy.
Instead I answered.
“Thea?”
The voice was female, older, careful.
“Yes?”
“This is Patricia.” A pause. “Your Aunt Patty. David’s sister.”
I sat up so fast I hit my elbow against the wall.
I hadn’t spoken to my father’s sister since shortly after the funeral. My mother had cut off that entire side of the family almost immediately after remarrying, always under the pretense that maintaining those relationships was “too emotionally complicated right now.” By then I knew that phrase usually meant those relationships contained truths she did not want near her.
“Aunt Patricia?”
“I know your mother doesn’t want us talking,” she said. “But there’s something important I need to tell you. Something your father left for you.”
I spent the next forty-eight hours moving through school and work as if a second bloodstream had started running under my skin.
That weekend I told my mother I was staying with a classmate for a study session. She barely looked up from her laptop. Richard grunted. Derek wasn’t home.
I took a six-hour bus to Boston.