Page 52 of The Tenant

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“Open?”

“Unlocked, I mean.”

“Does he usually leave it unlocked?”

“I have no idea.”

“So when you noticed it was unlocked, you went in?”

I nod. “I just wanted to make sure he was okay, but then I saw there was some food he left on the kitchen counter. And I saw the light on in the bathroom, and I…”

I find myself getting choked up. I don’t know why. I didn’t even like that bastard.

“It’s okay.” The officer taps at the screen of the iPad and stuffs it back in his jacket. “I think that’s enough.”

I nod, unable to speak.

“I’ll be giving his daughter a call,” he tells me. “I’ll let her know what happened.”

“Mr. Zimmerly had a daughter?”

“Looks like it,” he confirms. “She lives all the way out in California. Guess they didn’t see each other much.”

I never saw one person coming in or out of Mr. Zimmerly’s house in the time I’ve known him. Certainly not a woman young enough to be his daughter. (Although I suppose given his age, any daughter would be at least in her sixties.) He had a whole family I never knew about, yet it seemed nobody cared about him at all.

Somehow, I think about Krista. And how I imagined building a life with her. Without her, I have nobody. The same way Mr. Zimmerly had nobody.

Great. I’m going to end up bitter and alone and obsessed with garbage until one day, I drop dead in my own bathroom.

As soon as the last of the entourage leaves my block, I take out my phone. I tap out a message to Krista:

Mr. Zimmerly died.

I am heartened by the fact that a few bubbles appear on the screen, indicating that she might be responding. Although I have been fooled by those bubbles before.

But then a response pops up:

I’m sorry. Are you OK?

Kind of shaken. At least I don’t have to worry about the garbage bins anymore.

She writes back:

Silver lining.

She’s talking to me. This is a really good sign. Maybe she’s done having her space and she’s ready to come back. While I’ve got her attention, I type into the screen:

I miss you.

The bubbles appear again. They flash on the screen over and over as I stand there, holding my breath, waiting for her to respond.

But she never does.

31

I’m at the laundromat.

It’s not my favorite place to be, especially after I spent most of last night tossing and turning, having nightmares about finding Mr. Zimmerly’s dead body. But I don’t have much of a choice. I don’t have Krista to wash my clothes at work anymore, and I can’t trust my own washer and dryer.