She Found Her Condo Fund Empty, Then Her Family Started Calling-yumihong

The kitchen smelled like cold coffee, lemon cleaner, and the leftover quiche my mother had wrapped in foil after Chloe’s birthday dinner.

I remember that smell because grief sometimes chooses the smallest details and pins them to your memory.

The blinds were half open.

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The dawn looked gray and thin.

My navy scrubs were stiff at the knees from another fourteen-hour overnight shift at the veterinary trauma center, and my shoes made that tired rubber sound on the kitchen tile when I walked in.

I was twenty-nine years old, and I had been awake so long that the whole room seemed to hum.

The refrigerator hummed.

The light over the sink hummed.

Even my bones felt like they were humming.

I opened my banking app at the kitchen table because it was payday, and payday had become a ritual for me.

Coffee first.

Check the paycheck.

Pay the bills.

Move whatever I could into the savings account I had named Condo Fund.

That account was not some cute goal I talked about online.

It was three years of overnight shifts.

It was missed dinners, missed weekends, and sleeping through sunny afternoons while the rest of my neighborhood mowed lawns and took kids to soccer practice.

It was every time I said no to takeout.

Every time I wore the same coat another winter.

Every time I drove past a condo listing with a little ache in my chest and told myself, keep going.

The balance should have been seventeen thousand four hundred sixty dollars.

Instead, it was gone.

For a moment, my brain refused to read the number.

I refreshed the app.

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