but only for a second.
I unlocked the door and opened it.
Baxter stood there, wide-eyed, panting, ears up. His tail was stiff, not wagging.
And in his mouth was something yellow.
I blinked hard. My brain couldn’t catch up with what my eyes were seeing.
“Baxter… is that…?” My voice trailed off.
He stepped forward, carefully set the soft, yellow fabric bundle at my feet, and looked straight up at me.
It was Lily’s sweater!
The same one I hadn’t seen since the police took it.
The same one she had been wearing when she died!
It was Lily’s sweater!
My legs nearly gave out! I grabbed the doorframe to steady myself, breath caught in my chest.
“This… this isn’t possible,” I whispered.
I reached down with shaking hands to pick it up, but Baxter grabbed it again.
“Hey?! Where did you get this? Give that to me,” I said, tears burning behind my eyes.
Baxter didn’t bark or move for a few seconds. He just stared at me with those intelligent, urgent eyes, then turned his head sharply toward the backyard.
Then he took off!
My legs nearly gave out!
“Baxter!” I yelled, fumbling to throw on a pair of clogs as I chased after him. I didn’t even stop to put on a jacket.
He slipped through a gap in the wooden fence at the back of the yard — the one Lily used to squeeze through during summer to play in the empty lot next door. I hadn’t thought about that lot in months. We always said we’d put up a real barrier, but we never got around to it.
I followed, breathless, sweater clenched in one hand. The air smelled of wet leaves and distant rain. I hadn’t been beyond that fence in years.
I didn’t even stop
to put on a jacket.
“Where are you taking me?” I called after him, my voice cracking.
Baxter stopped every few yards, looking over his shoulder to make sure I was still coming. And I was. Something told me I had to. It was like he wanted to show me something connected to Lily.
He led me to the far side of the lot, past the weeds and rusted tools, right to the edge of the old shed. It hadn’t been used for years. The door hung crooked on one hinge.
The door hung crooked
on one hinge.
After about ten minutes, Baxter finally stopped in the doorway, motionless. Then he looked back at me with the same eyes that had stared at me through the storm door, sweater in his mouth.
My heart was thudding hard.
“Okay,” I whispered, stepping inside.
The shed smelled of old, damp wood and dust. Strips of sunlight filtered through the warped boards, casting pale beams across the floor. I could hear my own breathing — shallow and shaky — as I stepped farther inside.
My heart was thudding hard.
That’s when I saw it.
In the far back corner, tucked behind a cracked flowerpot and an old rake, was what looked like a nest. It was not made of twigs or garbage, but of clothing. Soft, familiar clothing.
I crept closer, my heart climbing into my throat.
There, neatly arranged in a pile, were Lily’s things! Her purple scarf, her blue hoodie, the soft white cardigan she hadn’t worn since second grade — and nestled into them, as if swaddled by her memory, was a thin calico cat. Her belly rose and fell in a slow, rhythmic purr. Curled up against her were three tiny kittens, no bigger than teacups.
Aby zobaczyć pełną instrukcję gotowania, przejdź na następną stronę lub kliknij przycisk Otwórz (>) i nie zapomnij PODZIELIĆ SIĘ nią ze znajomymi na Facebooku.
