The Navy SEAL, The K9, And The Garage Door That Wouldn’t Stay Safe-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Navy SEAL, The K9, And The Garage Door That Wouldn’t Stay Safe-nga9999

The alarm never went off.

I woke up anyway.

Three minutes before six, my eyes opened to gray light pressing through the crooked blinds and the old house making the small tired sounds houses make when morning gets there before you are ready.

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The hardwood floor had that cold bite it gets before the heat kicks on.

Somewhere downstairs, the coffee maker clicked and sighed like a machine with more discipline than the man who owned it.

I lay still for one second too long, staring at the ceiling.

Then I remembered Lena was still gone.

That was how most mornings started.

Not with screaming.

Not with some dramatic collapse.

Just a quiet little correction inside my chest.

She was gone yesterday.

She was gone today.

She would still be gone after the coffee finished brewing.

Since she died, my body had kept time better than any clock.

Grief is not forgetfulness.

It is the opposite.

It remembers for you, even when you are too tired to do it yourself.

Barrett’s bedroom door was still shut down the hall.

That mattered more than it should have.

A closed door meant my nine-year-old boy was still asleep, still breathing, still inside the soft part of the morning where homework and breakfast and finding both shoes were the only problems waiting for him.

I stood outside his room for a moment with my hand hovering near the knob.

I did not open it.

Single parents learn strange forms of restraint.

You want to check everything.

You want to make sure every silence is safe.

But you also have to let your child live inside a house without making your fear the loudest thing in it.

By 6:43, Barrett was at the kitchen counter in mismatched socks, eating cereal with the seriousness of a contractor reading blueprints.

He had his spiral notebook tucked under one elbow.

The cover was bent and soft at the corners, the kind of notebook that had been shoved into a backpack too many times and rescued from the bottom of the school bus at least once.

Most of the pages were what I expected.

Spaceships.

Dinosaurs.

Explosions that had no legal cause and no visible casualties.

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