They Sent A Forklift For His Late Wife’s Greenhouse, But The Cameras Were Already Live

Chapter 1: The Blue Hydrangeas Behind The Glass

The red tag was zip-tied to the greenhouse door handle, not the mailbox, not the front gate, not even the little cedar post where the HOA liked to tape its warnings like public shame.

Raymond Hill stopped with the hose in his hand and stared at it.

The tag swung slightly against the glass, bright as a warning flare in the morning sun. Behind it, blue hydrangeas crowded the greenhouse in soft, impossible clusters, their petals damp from the timed misting line he had repaired two nights earlier. Water ticked through the thin irrigation tubes with the steady patience of a heartbeat.

He did not move for several seconds.

Then he set the hose down in the gravel, wiped both hands on his work pants, and walked to the greenhouse door.

The tag had been pulled tight, the plastic tie biting into the brass handle Virginia had picked out fifteen years ago from a salvage shop three towns over. She had called it “unnecessarily pretty,” which meant she wanted it. Raymond had installed it that same afternoon while she stood inside the unfinished greenhouse holding a tray of baby hydrangeas like they were sleeping children.

He slipped a folding knife from his pocket and cut the tie carefully so the blade would not nick the brass.

The red tag dropped into his palm.

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