We raised our son, Paul, in that two-story house with the green shutters, the one where the porch always smelled faintly of lilacs in spring.
That house was more than brick and wood; it was the place where I cooked Sunday dinners, where Richard and I marked Paul’s height on the kitchen doorway, and where, after Richard passed five years ago, I learned to live with quiet evenings and empty chairs.
I thought I knew grief, but nothing prepared me for the kind of betrayal that would come not from strangers, but from family.
