After Forty-One Days Gone, Her Friends Came Looking for the Drive-Cherry - Chainityai

After Forty-One Days Gone, Her Friends Came Looking for the Drive-Cherry

The pounding started at 2:13 in the morning.

Not a polite knock.

Not someone embarrassed to wake a neighbor.

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It was the kind of pounding that made the whole front door shudder in its frame and made the spoon in my sink rattle against the coffee mug I had not washed before bed.

For three seconds, I did not move.

Rain clicked against the kitchen window.

The porch light buzzed outside, weak and yellow, and the little American flag by my mailbox snapped in the wind hard enough to sound like a warning.

Then came Clara’s voice.

“Evelyn. Please.”

I got up barefoot, moving through the kitchen by memory, and took the small knife from the sink before I crossed the hall.

I did not think I would use it.

That was not the point.

Sometimes holding something is the only way your hands admit they are afraid.

I looked through the peephole.

Clara stood on my porch in a torn coat, one hand pressed against her cheek, the other gripping Nate by the collar as he sagged against the railing.

Rain had flattened her hair to her face.

Nate’s shirt was dark across the front, and he looked like he could barely keep his feet under him.

“Open the door before he comes back,” Clara whispered.

Her eyes were not on me.

They kept darting toward the street.

Forty-one days.

That was how long it had taken them to notice I was gone.

For years, I had been the woman they called when nobody else wanted to be useful.

I brought food no one asked for.

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