Two weeks after Julia’s email—“Case resolved. Repayment agreement signed. Probate reversed. You’re clear.”—life began to regain temperature. Not heat. Not fireworks. Just warmth at the edges of the ordinary. The kettle clicked off. The floor under my bare feet felt like a choice I’d made. Sunlight moved across the new apartment wall like a slow, careful promise.
I kept waiting for my nervous system to report an emergency I’d forgotten to handle. It didn’t. The phone still blinked sometimes, but my settings did the work my spine used to do: unknown numbers to voicemail; family addresses to the archive; legal notices to a folder labeled JULIA—ACTIVE. Boundaries, it turned out, could be automated.
On a Thursday morning, a certified letter slid under my door. It wore the neutral suit of bureaucracy: Patterson & Low Probate Office—Supplemental Discovery. I made tea, sat at the little bar that pretended to be a kitchen table, and opened it with the unhurried hands of a person who knows she can handle whatever is inside.