I saw a man toss a wooden crate into the river and speed away.

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I ran closer and heard a faint noise from inside. My hands shook as I whispered, “Please… let it be empty.” When I opened it, I froze. I was thirty-four when the fire took my wife, Tessa, and our little boy.

I was working nights at the frozen foods warehouse. Cold dock, a five-degree shift, forklifts screaming in reverse. The sound of sirens cut through the frigid air just past 3:00 a.m.

I didn’t know they were headed to my street until my supervisor, Daryl, came running, his phone in hand, his mouth a flat, grim line. They said it started in the kitchen. A faulty wire, maybe.

They said it was fast. I still hear those sirens in my sleep, a wail that never quite ends. The house was gone.

I remember standing on the curb in my steel-toed boots, wearing the stupid company parka with ‘Harlon’ stitched on the front, as if a name could stop your world from collapsing into ash. They let me through the yellow tape, sat me down in the back of a police cruiser, and said the words that nobody should ever have to hear. At the memorial, I didn’t say a word.

I just stood there, my suit too tight, my jaw locked so hard I thought my teeth would crack. That’s when Pastor Pierce walked up, a big man with gentle eyes, and shook my hand like I was a man, not a cautionary tale whispered about in the pews. He looked me in the eye, his gaze steady and unwavering, and said, “Don’t turn to the right or to the left.” I nearly laughed in his face.

I didn’t need churchy riddles. I needed my family back. But he stuck around.

He didn’t flinch when I ignored him. He didn’t back off when I barked at him to leave me alone. He just said it again, like a mechanic giving the same solid advice twice.

“Keep walking, Harlon. Don’t turn.”

I started going to his Tuesday night support group a week later. I didn’t talk, didn’t pray.

I just sat in the back of the stuffy church basement, drank burnt coffee, and stared at the stained carpet. Pierce never pushed. He just nodded when I showed up and clapped me on the shoulder when I left.

Half the reason I kept going was him. The other half was Maren, Tessa’s younger sister. She was at every group meeting, checking in afterward, leaving Tupperware containers of lasagna on my porch, calling just enough to be annoying, but not so much that I snapped.

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