Twenty years after losing his wife and daughters, I thought I was finally ready to open the rooms that grief had kept frozen in time. I was wrong. Some houses do not give up their secrets quietly.
The house felt heavier than usual that morning, like it knew something I didn't. Twenty years of silence had settled into the walls, into the wood, into the air I breathed.
I stood in the kitchen, staring at a stack of empty boxes my sons had brought in the night before.
"Dad, you sure you want to start with the girls' room?" Adam asked, leaning against the doorway with two coffee mugs in his hands.
"No," I admitted. "But if I don't start there, I'll never start at all."