Three years after I buried my husband, someone left a block of ice on my porch. By the next morning, I had drag marks, camera footage, a fake freezer rental in his name, and a trail leading me toward a secret he had hidden until the exact moment I was finally ready to face it.
I found the ice before sunrise on my porch. It was almost two feet long, thick as a cinder block, cloudy in the center, and already sweating onto the boards.
For a second, I thought it was a prank. Kids got bored, neighbors could be mean, and my grief could make me conjure up countless cruel scenarios.
There was something black inside the ice.
I messaged my neighbor, Mr. Callahan, and he stepped through the hedge gap between our yards.
“What is that?” he asked.
“I was hoping you could tell me.”
There was something black inside the ice. He rubbed the surface with his glove. I leaned down beside him, trying to make out the form through the bubbles in the ice. We chipped away at the block little by little, and eventually saw it.
A watch. With a black band, and a dark face, and scratches edge on the clasp.
“I know that watch.”
Mr. Callahan inhaled hard. I looked at him instead of the ice. He had gone pale.
“You need to call somebody,” he said. I stared at the watch.
“No.”
“Lena.”
“I know that watch.”
He swallowed, “So do I.”
That should have made me stop. Instead, something in me woke up.
My husband Daniel wore that watch every Saturday morning when he and Callahan trimmed the hedges and argued about football or my roses. He wore it everywhere.
After he died, I asked the hospital for it, and they told me it had been misplaced.
At the time, I couldn’t process everything, so I decided to let it go. Now it was frozen in a block of ice on my porch.
That should have made me stop. Instead, something in me woke up.
When Callahan came back, I had him hold the tape while I photographed the width between the tire marks at the curb.
“Do not step anywhere,” I said.
Mr. Callahan blinked. “What?”
“Not the walk. Not the grass by the curb. Go get your tape measure. Please.”
I used my phone to take pictures of the block, the scrape marks, and the trail down the walk where something heavy had been dragged from the street.
When Mr. Callahan came back, I had him hold the tape while I photographed the width between the tire marks at the curb.
By the fifth camera, I found it.
What happened next changed everything… continues on the next page.
TAP -> NEXT PAGE -> 👇