Page 16 of Phoenix


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I knew why.

I’d always known.

It wasn’t something therapy could fix. It was deep trauma, plain and simple. The kind that had sculpted me into the terminally-single woman I’d become.

I tossed the card on the table and decided the only thing that would help was wine—and a scalding hot bubble-bath.

But the second I flicked on the bedroom light, I stopped cold.

There, in the middle of my bed, sat a teddy bear.

I didn’t own a teddy bear.

Never had. Not even as a kid.

It wore a red velvet bow with gold trim, its beady black eyes staring at me like itknewsomething.

I glanced back toward the orchids at the door, then at the bear. My eyes swept the windows, slow and searching. I set the wine on the dresser and crossed the room like I was walking into a trap.

I stared at the bear. Picked it up.

I hated it instantly.

No card. No stitched-on "To/From." No sweet little message. Just… nothing.

My mind spun.

Why would my ex leave flowers on the porch during a thunderstorm, but sneak a stuffed animal onto my bed? He didn’t evenhavea key. I changed the locks the day I ended things.

I bit down on my lip—a nervous tic I despised.

Maybe I forgot to lock the door earlier? No. I always locked it.

Had someone broken in?

My heart kicked hard in my chest.

I put down the bear and moved through the house room by room—three total. Every door, every window—locked. No signs of forced entry. I considered calling the police, but then remembered the last two times I did that.

Both calls had ended the same way: with them implying I was losing my mind, and me starting to believe it.

I stood in the center of my living room, eyes drifting to the bookcases flanking the fireplace. I frowned.

The vesuvianite bookends—were they always positioned like that?

Were they?

Or was I losing it?

I walked back to the bedroom. Stared at the bear.

I didn’t know who sent it. I didn’t know how it got in. But I knew one thing for sure:

I didn’t like it.

And those warning bells in my head?

They weren’t just ringing.