The Night the Pattern Broke
The ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker sat in its usual spot, but the house felt strange. It was eleven at night, a time that usually brings quiet.
12 posts in personal stories.
The ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker sat in its usual spot, but the house felt strange. It was eleven at night, a time that usually brings quiet.
The kitchen was quiet, save for the rhythmic hum of the coffee maker heating the water. I reached for the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker to get a treat for the foster who lives with us now.
The kitchen floor felt colder than usual under my slippers when I reached for the ceramic dog-bone jar. Mabel was standing by the back door, her tail moving in a slow, uncertain rhythm that did not match her usual morning greeting.
I stood by the kitchen counter, hand hovering over the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, waiting for the familiar rhythm of the afternoon. Outside, the sun was hitting the porch, but inside, the air felt thick and still.
The kitchen linoleum caught the light in a thin, cold strip near the pantry. I stood by the coffee maker, hand resting on the ceramic dog-bone jar, listening to the steady, rhythmic sound of claws clicking against the floor.
The morning sunlight on the kitchen floor was golden and steady, casting long, familiar shadows near the pantry door. I stood by the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, holding a handful of kibble for Mabel.
The kitchen floor feels like the center of my world every morning. I reach for the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, listening for the familiar click of nails on the linoleum.
The morning light hits the kitchen floor in a way that makes the dust motes dance near the coffee maker, but I am not watching them. I am looking at the small, leather-bound notebook I keep on the counter next to the mugs.
The kitchen light was a pale, flat yellow when I finally set the kettle down. Mabel was standing near the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, staring at the pantry door as if she expected it to open by itself. She did not whine.
The afternoon light stretched long across the kitchen floor, hitting the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker just so. I was standing near the pantry, watching Mabel wander through the room as she always does. Then she stopped.
The ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker sits exactly where it has for six years, a constant witness to my habit of writing around the truth.
The long version of what I noticed, what I wrote down, what I changed, and the one chew that ended up staying in our routine.