Sarah is scraping dried sourdough starter off the surface of her kitchen island with a plastic bench scraper, a rhythmic sound that echoes in the quiet of a Tuesday morning in . She stops for a moment, the blade hovering over a small, stubborn crust, and realizes that she is looking at the only surviving witness to her marriage’s first decade.
Every other surface in this room has been interrogated, found wanting, and subsequently replaced. The cabinets, originally a dark espresso stain that felt sophisticated in , were sanded and painted a muted sage in . The backsplash, once a tumble-stoned mosaic that trapped grease in its many crevices, was swapped for large-format porcelain tiles about ago.
Even the appliances, those gleaming stainless steel promises of culinary prowess, have been cycled out as their motherboards succumbed to planned obsolescence. But the stone remains. It is a heavy, silent slab of honed granite that she picked out during a frantic window nearly two decades ago.
At the time, she chose it because it “pulled out the warm tones” in the floorboards. Today, those floorboards are gone, replaced by light oak planks, and the granite doesn’t care. It sits there, anchoring a kitchen it was never intended to inhabit. It is the architectural equivalent of a person wearing a tuxedo to a