waits for someone bleeding to grab one.
I call the officer whose card is still warm in my pocket. My voice sounds steadier than I feel as I tell him about the door camera, the shoebox, the message, the old photos.
He says they are already at our apartment.
Then he pauses.
“Mrs. Parker, your mother-in-law is not at the clinic anymore.”
I grip the phone.
“What?continue reading …