Inside, family is not a paper pedigree but a room full of gestures. The dining table keeps the fingerprints of generations: a faded ring where a cup always sat, a scar where a knife slipped and someone told a joke to make the pain small. Abandoned things — a child’s shoe, a letter never mailed, a photograph turned face-down — are less evidence of loss than catalogues of the ways people once decided to stay. They are topographical markers, each object a contour line representing the rises and falls of attention, love, and neglect.