Pupz Heaven

Paws, Play, and Heartwarming Tales

Interesting Showbiz Tales

My grandson called me at 5 a.m. and said, ‘Grandma, don’t wear your red coat today.’ I asked why, and in a trembling voice, he said, ‘You’ll understand soon.’ At 9 a.m., I went to catch the bus. But when I saw the crowd gathered by the stop, I finally understood why — and my stomach just tightened.

My grandson called me at 5 a.m. and said, ‘Grandma, don’t wear your red coat today.’ I asked why, and in a trembling voice, he said, ‘You’ll understand soon.’ At 9 a.m., I went to catch the bus. But when I saw the crowd gathered by the stop, I finally understood why — and my stomach just tightened.

82

“DON’T WEAR YOUR RED COAT TODAY,” MY GRANDSON SAID. HOURS LATER, I SAW WHY — AND MY STOMACH DROPPED.

My grandson called me at 5:00 a.m. and said, “Grandma, don’t wear your red coat today.” I asked why, and with a trembling voice, he said, “You’ll understand soon.” At 9:00 a.m., I went to catch the bus like I had a hundred Tuesdays before.

When I arrived, I froze in place the moment I saw what was unfolding there.

The phone rang at exactly five in the morning. I know because I was already awake, sitting in my grandmother’s old rocking chair by the front window, watching the darkness slowly surrender to dawn over the fields.

At sixty‑three, sleep comes in fragments now, scattered like puzzle pieces I can’t quite fit together anymore. The Montana farmhouse creaked around me, those familiar sounds of old wood settling that I’ve known my entire life.

The smell of coffee hung in the air from the pot I’d set to brew at 4:30, rich and bitter, mixing with the faint scent of woodsmoke from last night’s fire. Out past the cottonwoods, the Beartooth Mountains were just a darker line against the sky, waiting for the sun.

When I saw Dany’s name on the screen, my heart lurched. My grandson never called at this hour.

Never.

“Grandma.” His voice was barely a whisper, trembling like a candle flame in the wind.

“Dany, sweetheart, what’s wrong?”

“Grandma, please, you have to listen to me.”

There was something in his tone that made my blood run cold. Not panic exactly, but something worse—fear wrapped tight around urgency. Like he was holding back a scream.

“Don’t wear your red coat today.

Please.”

I glanced at the coat rack near the front door where my cherry‑red winter coat hung, just like it did every morning during this long Montana winter. I’d bought it three years ago in Billings at the big mall off the interstate—a ridiculous splurge for a widow on a fixed income, justified because it made me visible on the dark rural roads. Bright.

Loud. Safe.

“Dany, what are you talking about?”

“Just please, Grandma, don’t wear it. Wear anything else.

Promise me.”

“You’re scaring me, honey. Where are you? Are you all right?”

“I can’t explain right now.

You’ll understand soon. Just promise me, please.”

“Dany—”

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